Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!snorkelwacker!husc6!xmjschm From: xmjschm@stanislav.dfci.harvard.edu (Mike Schmelzer) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: ANSI<->classic converters, cont. Message-ID: Date: 21 Sep 90 19:43:29 GMT Sender: news@husc6.harvard.edu Reply-To: xmjschm@mbcrr.harvard.edu Distribution: comp Organization: The Molecular Biology Computer Research Resource Lines: 23 The story so far: I'm looking for a utility to convert between ANSI and classical style function definitions. The response from my previous article: none. The followup research I did: I found a copy of Karl H's "deproto" and have not been able to get it to work. I looked at a comp.sources.unix archive and found a program called cproto - which requires GNU's flex. Also I checked out the latest FAQ file, which mentioned a program called protoize, which sounds like it's what I want. I couldn't find protoize in the archive. (I grepped the indeces for "prototype" "proto" "ANSI" "function" and fragments thereof and did not come up with anything else.) So I'll ask again: Does anybody have a useful and robust tool that can convert between ANSI and classical function definitions? (Not just declarations, although that would be a first step.) AdvTHANKSance, Mike -- ========== Mike Schmelzer ============== "If looks could kill, ===== xmjschm@mbcrr.harvard.edu ======== here's looking at you." =========== 608-262-5013 =============== - Eleventh Dream Day