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This is a really basic question but I am just beginning to use command line arguments in my programs. Normally I would compile the program in terminal with g++ example.cpp Then I would type ./a.out and would do the cout/cin back and forth.

My question is, after I have compiled the program, what do I type in the terminal to let it know I am about to input the arguments?

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    ./a.out arg1 arg2 arg3, for example.
    – lapk
    Aug 12, 2013 at 19:00
  • cin and cout are how c++ can communicate via stdin and stdout. The arguments are a different thing, not stdin or stdout. Aug 12, 2013 at 19:04

2 Answers 2

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Create an output file of the same program. Do it by entering this in the terminal:

g++ example.cpp -o example

When compiled, run the program as:

./example arg1 arg2

Even the above method by @Petr Budnik works.

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You define command line arguments when you first invoke the program. For example, the command cp ~/file.txt ~/folder/ takes the command line arguments "cp", "~/file.txt", and "~/folder/". Do note that the first argument in an array of command line arguments is the name of the program itself.

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