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31 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
31 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
The [_COMMANDCOUNT](_COMMANDCOUNT) function returns the number or arguments passed from the command line to the [COMMAND$](COMMAND$) function.
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## Syntax
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> result& = [_COMMANDCOUNT](_COMMANDCOUNT)
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## Description
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* The function returns the number of arguments passed from the command line to a program when it's executed.
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* Arguments are spaced as separate numerical or text values. Spaced text inside of quotes is considered as one argument.
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* In C, this function would generally be regarded as 'argc' when the main program is defined as the following: **int main(int argc, char *argv[])**
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## Example(s)
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The code below gets the number of parameters passed to our program from the command line with _COMMANDCOUNT:
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```vb
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limit = _COMMANDCOUNT
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FOR i = 1 TO limit
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PRINT COMMAND$(i)
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NEXT
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```
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> *Explanation:* If we start *ThisProgram.exe* from the command window with **ThisProgram -l "loadfile.txt" -s "savefile.txt"**, the _COMMANDCOUNT would be 4, "-l", "loadfile.txt", "-s", "savefile.txt" command arguments passed to the program, which we could then read separately with COMMAND$(n).
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## See Also
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* [COMMAND$](COMMAND$)
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* [SHELL](SHELL)
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