updated sample code

This commit is contained in:
hyung-hwan 2021-08-19 20:03:42 +00:00
parent c870c6be18
commit cad8769dc0

View File

@ -559,7 +559,7 @@ Socket functions are available.
BEGIN {
mysql = mysql::open();
if (mysql::connect(mysql, "192.168.1.1", "mysql", "username", "password") <= -1)
if (mysql::connect(mysql, "localhost", "username", "password", "mysql") <= -1)
{
print "connect error -", mysql::errmsg();
}
@ -710,7 +710,7 @@ The following sample illustrates the basic steps hightlighed above.
}
If you prefer C++, you may use the Hawk/HawkStd wrapper classes to simplify the task. The C++ classes are inferior to the C equivalents in that they don't allow creation of multiple runtime contexts over a single hawk instance. Here is the sample code that prints "hello, world":
If you prefer C++, you may use the Hawk/HawkStd wrapper classes to simplify the task. The C++ classes are inferior to the C equivalents in that they don't allow creation of multiple runtime contexts over a single hawk instance. Here is the sample code that prints "hello, world".
#include <HawkStd.hpp>
#include <stdio.h>
@ -728,7 +728,7 @@ If you prefer C++, you may use the Hawk/HawkStd wrapper classes to simplify the
HAWK::HawkStd::SourceString s("BEGIN { print \"hello, world\"; }");
if (hawk.parse(s, HAWK::HawkStd::Source::NONE) == HAWK_NULL)
{
fprintf (stderr, "unable to open parse - %s\n", hawk.getErrorMessageB());
fprintf (stderr, "unable to parse - %s\n", hawk.getErrorMessageB());
hawk.close ();
return -1;
}