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This means it might contain formatting issues, incorrect code, conceptual problems, or other severe issues.
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{{task|Basic language learning}} [[Category:Initialization]] The task is to programmatically obtain the name used to invoke the program. (For example determine whether the user ran "python hello.py", or "python hellocaller.py", a program importing the code from "hello.py".)
Sometimes a [[multiline shebang]] is necessary in order to provide the script name to a language's internal ARGV.
See also [[Command-line arguments]]
Examples from [https://github.com/mcandre/scriptname GitHub].
AArch64 Assembly
{{works with|aarch64-linux-gnu-as/qemu-aarch64}}
Without built-in CRT, argc
and argv
are stored in the stack. The format looks like:
Each item of <code>argv</code> is a pointer to a null-terminated 8-bit string.
<lang ARM_Assembly>.equ STDOUT, 1
.equ SVC_WRITE, 64
.equ SVC_EXIT, 93
.text
.global _start
_start:
stp x29, x30, [sp, -16]!
mov x29, sp
ldr x0, [sp, 24] // argv[0]
bl _strlen // strlen(argv[0])
mov x2, x0
mov x0, #STDOUT
ldr x1, [sp, 24]
bl _write // write(stdout, argv[0], strlen(argv[0]))
ldp x29, x30, [sp], 16
mov x0, #0
b _exit // exit(0);
// ssize_t _strlen(const char *str)
_strlen:
mov x1, x0
mov x0, #-1
1: add x0, x0, #1
ldrb w2, [x1, x0]
cbnz x2, 1b
ret
.text
//////////////// system call wrappers
// ssize_t _write(int fd, void *buf, size_t count)
_write:
stp x29, x30, [sp, -16]!
mov x8, #SVC_WRITE
mov x29, sp
svc #0
ldp x29, x30, [sp], 16
ret
// void _exit(int retval)
_exit:
mov x8, #SVC_EXIT
svc #0
Ada
Being a compiled language, Ada has difficulties accessing source code filenames. But it is easy to access the executable's filename, using the function Command_Name defined in Ada.Command_Line:
with Ada.Command_Line, Ada.Text_IO;
procedure Command_Name is
begin
Ada.Text_IO.Put_Line(Ada.Command_Line.Command_Name);
end Command_Name;
Aime
The program command line arguments are accessible via the argc()/argv() functions. The program name is the first in the list of arguments.
o_text(argv(0));
o_byte('\n');
ALGOL 68
{{out}}
```txt
$ a68g Program_name.a68
Program_name.a68
$
Applesoft BASIC
10 GOSUB 40"GET PROGRAM NAME
20 PRINT N$
30 END
40 REMGET PROGRAM NAME
50 GOSUB 100"GET INPUT BUFFER
60 GOSUB 200"REMOVE RUN PREFIX
70 GOSUB 300"REMOVE , SUFFIXES
80 GOSUB 400"TRIM SPACES
90 RETURN
100 REMGET INPUT BUFFER
110 N$ = ""
120 FOR I = 512 TO 767
130 B = PEEK (I) - 128
140 IF B < 32 THEN RETURN
150 N$ = N$ + CHR$ (B)
160 NEXT I
170 RETURN
200 REMREMOVE RUN PREFIX
210 P = 1
220 FOR I = 1 TO 3
230 FOR J = P TO LEN(N$)
240 C$ = MID$ (N$,J,1)
250 P = P + 1
260 IF C$ = " " THEN NEXT J
270 IF C$ = MID$("RUN",I,1) THEN NEXT I:N$ = MID$(N$,P,LEN(N$)-P+1):RETURN
280 PRINT "YOU NEED TO RUN THIS PROGRAM USING THE RUN COMMAND FROM DOS."
290 END
300 REMREMOVE , SUFFIXES
310 L = LEN (N$)
320 FOR I = 1 TO L
330 C$ = MID$ (N$,I,1)
340 IF C$ = "," THEN N$ = LEFT$(N$,I - 1): RETURN
350 NEXT I
360 RETURN
400 REMTRIM SPACES
410 GOSUB 600
500 REMLEFT TRIM SPACES
510 L = LEN(N$) - 1
520 FOR I = L TO 0 STEP -1
530 IF I < 0 THEN RETURN
540 IF LEFT$ (N$,1) <> " " THEN RETURN
550 IF I THEN N$ = RIGHT$ (N$, I)
560 NEXT I
570 N$ = "
580 RETURN
600 REMRIGHT TRIM SPACES
610 L = LEN(N$) - 1
620 FOR I = L TO 0 STEP -1
630 IF I < 0 THEN RETURN
640 IF RIGHT$ (N$,1) <> " " THEN RETURN
650 IF I THEN N$ = LEFT$ (N$, I)
660 NEXT I
670 N$ = "
680 RETURN
ARM Assembly
{{works with|as|Raspberry Pi}}
/* ARM assembly Raspberry PI */
/* program namepgm.s */
/* Constantes */
.equ STDOUT, 1
.equ WRITE, 4
.equ EXIT, 1
/* Initialized data */
.data
szMessage: .asciz "Program : " @
szRetourLigne: .asciz "\n"
.text
.global main
main:
push {fp,lr} /* save des 2 registres */
add fp,sp,#8 /* fp <- adresse début */
ldr r0, iAdrszMessage @ adresse of message
bl affichageMess @ call function
ldr r0,[fp,#4] @ recup name of program in command line
bl affichageMess @ call function
ldr r0, iAdrszRetourLigne @ adresse of message
bl affichageMess @ call function
/* fin standard du programme */
mov r0, #0 @ return code
pop {fp,lr} @restaur des 2 registres
mov r7, #EXIT @ request to exit program
swi 0 @ perform the system call
iAdrszMessage: .int szMessage
iAdrszRetourLigne: .int szRetourLigne
/******************************************************************/
/* affichage des messages avec calcul longueur */
/******************************************************************/
/* r0 contient l adresse du message */
affichageMess:
push {fp,lr} /* save des 2 registres */
push {r0,r1,r2,r7} /* save des autres registres */
mov r2,#0 /* compteur longueur */
1: /*calcul de la longueur */
ldrb r1,[r0,r2] /* recup octet position debut + indice */
cmp r1,#0 /* si 0 c est fini */
beq 1f
add r2,r2,#1 /* sinon on ajoute 1 */
b 1b
1: /* donc ici r2 contient la longueur du message */
mov r1,r0 /* adresse du message en r1 */
mov r0,#STDOUT /* code pour écrire sur la sortie standard Linux */
mov r7, #WRITE /* code de l appel systeme "write" */
swi #0 /* appel systeme */
pop {r0,r1,r2,r7} /* restaur des autres registres */
pop {fp,lr} /* restaur des 2 registres */
bx lr /* retour procedure */
AutoHotkey
MsgBox, % A_ScriptName
AWK
# syntax: TAWK -f PROGRAM_NAME.AWK
#
# GAWK can provide the invoking program name from ARGV[0] but is unable to
# provide the AWK script name that follows -f. Thompson Automation's TAWK
# version 5.0c, last released in 1998 and no longer commercially available, can
# provide the AWK script name that follows -f from the PROGFN built-in
# variable. It should also provide the invoking program name, E.G. TAWK, from
# ARGV[0] but due to a bug it holds the fully qualified -f name instead.
#
# This example is posted here with hopes the TAWK built-in variables PROGFN
# (PROGram File Name) and PROGLN (PROGram Line Number) be added to GAWK by its
# developers.
#
BEGIN {
printf("%s -f %s\n",ARGV[0],PROGFN)
printf("line number %d\n",PROGLN)
exit(0)
}
{{out}}
TAWK -f PROGRAM_NAME.AWK
C:\program_name.awk -f program_name.awk
line number 16
GAWK -f PROGRAM_NAME.AWK
gawk -f
line number 0
BASIC
Many BASICs -- notably older DOS BASICs, and especially DOS MS BASICs -- do not provide any way to retrieve the program's name.
=
FreeBASIC
=
Unlike most MS BASICs, [[FreeBASIC]] provides a parsed version of [http://www.freebasic.net/wiki/wikka.php?wakka=KeyPgCommand COMMAND$]
(called as COMMAND$(n)
). COMMAND$(0)
is the program's name:
appname = COMMAND$(0)
Additionally, FreeBASIC also provides an analog of [[#C|C's]] argc/argv[]
, called [http://www.freebasic.net/wiki/wikka.php?wakka=KeyPgDdfbargc FB_ARGC]
and [http://www.freebasic.net/wiki/wikka.php?wakka=KeyPgDdfbargv FB_ARGV]
. FB_ARGV can be used to get the program's name like this:
appname = *__FB_ARGV__(0)
See also: [[#PowerBASIC|PowerBASIC]], [[#PureBasic|PureBasic]], [[#Visual Basic|Visual Basic]].
=
BBC BASIC
= {{works with|BBC BASIC for Windows}}
SYS "GetCommandLine" TO cl%
PRINT $$cl%
==={{header|IS-BASIC}}===
edit 1 100 PROGRAM "Name2.bas"(A,B,C,S$) 110 PRINT A,B,C,S$
edit 0 start(1,2,3,"Hello")
## C
It might not be very useful for a C program to access source filenames, because C code must be compiled into an executable, and anything could have happened to the source file after the compilation. However, C can access the executable's name in <code>argv[0]</code>.
* <code>argv[0]</code> might be the name of an executable in the PATH, or it might be an absolute or relative path to the executable. At least with [[Unix]], the parent process can set <code>argv[0]</code> to any string, so <code>argv[0]</code> might not be the real name. It is best to pretend that <code>argv[0]</code> has the correct value, but mind that <code>argv[0]</code> might not be an actual file.
```c
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
printf("Executable: %s\n", argv[0]);
return 0;
}
To get the source information about some part of code, use compiler defined macros. Most compilers support them or some variation of.
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("This code was in file %s in function %s, at line %d\n",\
__FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__);
return 0;
}
BSD
[[BSD]] provides two more ways to get the program's name.
__progname
is the filename from argv[0]
(so if argv[0]
is a path, then __progname
is only the filename). No header file declares __progname
, so programs must declare extern char __progname;
to use it.
ucomm
always gives the real filename of the executable, even if argv[0]
has a different name. ucomm
is a field in the process information; ps -O ucomm
prints it. Other than ps(1) and top(1), few programs access ucomm
. There is a C interface to the process information, but it often changes between BSD versions.
Starting with OpenBSD 5.0, ucomm
is field p_comm
of struct kinfo_proc
, and kvm_getprocs()
in libkvm can fill this struct. (Rosetta Code will welcome contributions for other BSD variants.)
{{libheader|BSD libc}}
{{works with|OpenBSD|5.0}} '''To compile myname.c:''' make myname LDLIBS=-lkvm
/* myname.c */
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h> /* struct kinfo_proc */
#include <err.h>
#include <fcntl.h> /* O_RDONLY */
#include <kvm.h>
#include <limits.h> /* _POSIX2_LINE_MAX */
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(int argc, char **argv) {
extern char *__progname; /* from crt0.o */
struct kinfo_proc *procs;
kvm_t *kd;
int cnt;
char errbuf[_POSIX2_LINE_MAX];
printf("argv[0]: %s\n", argv[0]);
printf("__progname: %s\n", __progname);
kd = kvm_openfiles(NULL, NULL, NULL, KVM_NO_FILES, errbuf);
if (kd == NULL)
errx(1, "%s", errbuf);
procs = kvm_getprocs(kd, KERN_PROC_PID, getpid(),
sizeof procs[0], &cnt);
if (procs == NULL)
errx(1, "%s", kvm_geterr(kd));
if (cnt != 1)
errx(1, "impossible");
printf("p_comm: %s\n", procs[0].p_comm);
kvm_close(kd);
return 0;
}
The program can have three different names!
$ perl -e 'exec {"./myname"} "/nobin/fakename"'
argv[0]: /nobin/fakename
__progname: fakename
ucomm: myname
Windows
[http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms683197%28v=VS.85%29.aspx GetModuleFileName], from the Win32 API, provides the correct path to the current executable file.
{{libheader|Win32}}
#include <windows.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <wchar.h>
/*
* Returns the path to the current executable file, in a newly
* allocated buffer. Use free() to free it.
*/
wchar_t *
exepath(void)
{
wchar_t *buf, *newbuf;
long blen, flen;
/*
* Most paths fit in MAX_PATH == 260 characters, but very
* long UNC paths might require a larger buffer.
*/
buf = NULL;
for (blen = MAX_PATH; 1; blen += MAX_PATH) {
/* Enlarge buffer. */
newbuf = realloc(buf, blen * sizeof buf[0]);
if (newbuf == NULL) {
free(buf);
return NULL;
}
buf = newbuf;
flen = GetModuleFileNameW(NULL, buf, blen);
if (flen == 0) {
free(buf);
return NULL;
}
if (flen < blen)
return buf;
}
}
/*
* Print the path to this executable.
*/
int
main()
{
wchar_t *path;
path = exepath();
if (path == NULL) {
wprintf(L"Sorry, an error occured.\n");
return 1;
}
wprintf(L"Path to executable: %ls\n", path);
free(path);
return 0;
}
Path to executable: C:\Users\kernigh\Documents\field\scratch.exe
C++
C++ has difficulty accessing source code filenames, because C code must be compiled into an executable. However, C++ can access the executable's filename.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
char *program = argv[0];
cout << "Program: " << program << endl;
return 0;
}
C#
This effectively outputs the executable name, file path, and any arguments for the current program.
using System;
namespace ProgramName
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Console.Write(Environment.CommandLine);
}
}
}
In a C# application with a reference to System.Windows.Forms, the following can be used to retrieve the executable name and arguments without the full path.
using System;
namespace ProgramName
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Extracts the filename from the full path
System.IO.FileInfo exeInfo = new System.IO.FileInfo(System.Windows.Forms.Application.ExecutablePath);
Console.Write(exeInfo.Name);
// Writes all arguments to the console
foreach (string argument in args)
{
Console.Write(" " + argument);
}
}
}
}
Clojure
":";exec lein exec $0 ${1+"$@"}
":";exit
(ns scriptname
(:gen-class))
(defn -main [& args]
(let [program (first *command-line-args*)]
(println "Program:" program)))
(when (.contains (first *command-line-args*) *source-path*)
(apply -main (rest *command-line-args*)))
COBOL
{{works with|GnuCOBOL}} COBOL has an internal PROGRAM-ID name, and then the external invocation name.
identification division.
program-id. sample.
data division.
working-storage section.
01 progname pic x(16).
procedure division.
sample-main.
display 0 upon argument-number
accept progname from argument-value
display "argument-value zero :" progname ":"
display "function module-id :" function module-id ":"
goback.
end program sample.
{{out}}
prompt$ cobc -xj progname.cob
argument-value zero :./progname :
function module-id :sample:
CoffeeScript
scriptname.coffee:
#!/usr/bin/env coffee
main = () ->
program = __filename
console.log "Program: " + program
if not module.parent then main()
Common Lisp
Shebangs require a special tweak to ~/.clisprc.lisp.
;;; Play nice with shebangs
(set-dispatch-macro-character #\# #\!
(lambda (stream character n)
(declare (ignore character n))
(read-line stream nil nil t)
nil))
#!/bin/sh
#|
exec clisp -q -q $0 $0 ${1+"$@"}
exit
|#
;;; Usage: ./scriptname.lisp
(defun main (args)
(let ((program (car args)))
(format t "Program: ~a~%" program)
(quit)))
;;; With help from Francois-Rene Rideau
;;; http://tinyurl.com/cli-args
(let ((args
#+clisp (ext:argv)
#+sbcl sb-ext:*posix-argv*
#+clozure (ccl::command-line-arguments)
#+gcl si:*command-args*
#+ecl (loop for i from 0 below (si:argc) collect (si:argv i))
#+cmu extensions:*command-line-strings*
#+allegro (sys:command-line-arguments)
#+lispworks sys:*line-arguments-list*
))
(if (member (pathname-name *load-truename*)
args
:test #'(lambda (x y) (search x y :test #'equalp)))
(main args)))
D
#!/usr/bin/env rdmd
import std.stdio;
void main(in string[] args) {
writeln("Program: ", args[0]);
}
{{out}}
C:\rosetta>program_name.exe
Program: program_name.exe
$ dmd scriptname.d
$ ./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
If the system is configured, the D programming language offers an 'interpreted-looking' mode, which exhibits slightly different behavior than the normal compilation:
$ ./scriptname.d
Program: /tmp/.rdmd/Users/andrew/Desktop/src/scriptname/scriptname.d.D3B32385A31B968A3CF8CAF1E1426E5F
Alternative method using built-in function [http://dlang.org/changelog.html#current_path thisExePath()] {{works with|D|2.064+}}
// thisExePath function was introduced in D 2.064 (November 5, 2013)
import std.file;
import std.stdio;
void main(string[] args)
{
writeln("Program: ", thisExePath());
}
{{out}}
Z:\rosettacode>program_name.exe
Program: Z:\rosettacode\program_name.exe
Dart
#!/usr/bin/env dart
main() {
var program = new Options().script;
print("Program: ${program}");
}
Delphi
program ProgramName;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
begin
Writeln('Program name: ' + ParamStr(0));
Writeln('Command line: ' + CmdLine);
end.
=={{header|Déjà Vu}}==
!print( "Name of this file: " get-from !args 0 )
EchoLisp
(js-eval "window.location.href")
→ "http://www.echolalie.org/echolisp/"
Elena
ELENA 4.x :
import extensions;
public program()
{
console.printLine(program_arguments.asEnumerable()); // the whole command line
console.printLine(program_arguments[0]); // the program name
}
Emacs Lisp
:;exec emacs -batch -l $0 -f main $*
;;; Shebang from John Swaby
;;; http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsScripts
(defun main ()
(let ((program (nth 2 command-line-args)))
(message "Program: %s" program)))
load-file-name
is the ".el" or ".elc" currently being loaded. Within a batch -l
it will be the script name, but within sub-loads like require
etc it is that sub-load.
Erlang
If Erlang is used as a script language the function escript:script_name/0 will return the program name. When compiled Erlang's macros hold information about the running module.
%% Compile
%%
%% erlc scriptname.erl
%%
%% Run
%%
%% erl -noshell -s scriptname
-module(scriptname).
-export([start/0]).
start() ->
Program = ?FILE,
io:format("Program: ~s~n", [Program]),
init:stop().
Euphoria
constant cmd = command_line()
puts(1,cmd[2])
=={{header|F Sharp|F#}}==
This code correctly prints the program name in three modes:
- Run as a compiled program (either scriptname.exe in Windows, or mono scriptname.exe in Unix)
- Run as an interpreted program (fsharpi scriptname.fsx)
- Run as a dotslashed program in Unix (./scriptname.fsx)
#light (*
exec fsharpi --exec $0 --quiet
*)
let scriptname =
let args = System.Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()
let arg0 = args.[0]
if arg0.Contains("fsi") then
let arg1 = args.[1]
if arg1 = "--exec" then
args.[2]
else
arg1
else
arg0
let main =
printfn "%s" scriptname
Factor
#! /usr/bin/env factor
USING: namespaces io command-line ;
IN: scriptname
: main ( -- ) script get print ;
MAIN: main
Forth
{{works with|GNU Forth}}
0 arg type cr \ gforth or gforth-fast, for example
1 arg type cr \ name of script
Fortran
Please find example runs in the comments at the beginning of the FORTRAN2003 source. Program name verification can deter system attackers. Therefore, the code is provided as a separate easily reused module.
! program run with invalid name path/f
!
!-*- mode: compilation; default-directory: "/tmp/" -*-
!Compilation started at Sun Jun 2 00:18:31
!
!a=./f && make $a && OMP_NUM_THREADS=2 $a < unixdict.txt
!gfortran -std=f2008 -Wall -fopenmp -ffree-form -fall-intrinsics -fimplicit-none f.f08 -o f
!
!Compilation finished at Sun Jun 2 00:18:31
! program run with valid name path/rcname
!
!-*- mode: compilation; default-directory: "/tmp/" -*-
!Compilation started at Sun Jun 2 00:19:01
!
!gfortran -std=f2008 -Wall -fopenmp -ffree-form -fall-intrinsics -fimplicit-none f.f08 -o rcname && ./rcname
! ./rcname approved.
! program continues...
!
!Compilation finished at Sun Jun 2 00:19:02
module sundry
contains
subroutine verify_name(required)
! name verification reduces the ways an attacker can rename rm as cp.
character(len=*), intent(in) :: required
character(len=1024) :: name
integer :: length, status
! I believe get_command_argument is part of the 2003 FORTRAN standard intrinsics.
call get_command_argument(0, name, length, status)
if (0 /= status) stop
if ((len_trim(name)+1) .ne. (index(name, required, back=.true.) + len(required))) stop
write(6,*) trim(name)//' approved.'
end subroutine verify_name
end module sundry
program name
use sundry
call verify_name('rcname')
write(6,*)'program continues...'
end program name
FreeBASIC
' FB 1.05.0 Win64
Print "The program was invoked like this => "; Command(0) + " " + Command(-1)
Print "Press any key to quit"
Sleep
Gambas
'''[https://gambas-playground.proko.eu/?gist=fc8af45b13a9bb52b6955bab487fc7ac Click this link to run this code]'''
Public Sub Main()
Dim sTemp As String
Print "Command to start the program was ";;
For Each sTemp In Args.All
Print sTemp;;
Next
End
Output:
Command to start the program was ./CLIOnly.gambas Hello World!
Genie
[indent=4]
init
print args[0]
print Path.get_basename(args[0])
print Environment.get_application_name()
print Environment.get_prgname()
{{out}}
prompt$ valac programname.gs
prompt$ ./programname
./programname
programname
(null)
(null)
Go
scriptname.go:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
)
func main() {
fmt.Println("Program:", os.Args[0])
}
{{out|Command line session}}
> go build scriptname.go
> ./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
> mv scriptname newname
> ./newname
Program: ./newname
Groovy
All the [[#Java|Java]] solutions work equally well under Groovy when the program is invoked through the "main" method of a class. However, if a Groovy program is invoked as a script, the script runs as an instance method of itself as the instantiating class. If the script is running as a compiled string, the Groovy environment under which it is running assigns it a name.
If you want the script filename, use:
#!/usr/bin/env groovy
def program = getClass().protectionDomain.codeSource.location.path
println "Program: " + program
But if you just want the class name, there are easier ways.
So, just typing in and running the following in the GroovyConsole environment:
println this.class.getName()
yields the following on the first run:
ConsoleScript0
and the following on the third run:
ConsoleScript2
But if we save this one line script under the filename "Autonomous.groovy" and then load the file into the console, we get this on every run:
Autonomous
Using the package statement and an appropriate directory hierarchy to provide namespace semantics works exactly as it does in Java.
Haskell
Haskell has an impure function for this.
import System (getProgName)
main :: IO ()
main = getProgName >>= putStrLn . ("Program: " ++)
=={{header|Icon}} and {{header|Unicon}}==
procedure main()
write(&progname) # obtain and write out the program name from the keyword &progname
end
Io
#!/usr/bin/env io
main := method(
program := System args at(0)
("Program: " .. program) println
)
if (System args size > 0 and System args at(0) containsSeq("scriptname"), main)
J
#!/usr/bin/env jconsole
program =: monad : 0
if. (#ARGV) > 1 do.
> 1 { ARGV
else.
'Interpreted'
end.
)
echo 'Program: ', program 0
exit ''
Java
On one hand, this task is trivial for Java. Java code is (usually) compiled into bytecode as ''class files''. There is exactly one class file per class, named
(regardless of what the original source files were called or how classes were organized in the source). One executes Java code by executing some class which contains a main method, by running the command java
. Hence, it is guaranteed that the "name" of the executable ''is'' the class name (possibly prepended by package names, using the usual Java dot notation); and this is known in the main method at the time the code is written because ''it is the very class that the main method is in''. Hence, the complicated solutions listed in this section do not gain anything that is not already known by the programmer at the time the code is written.
However, it is tedious to hard-code the class names if you need to do this in a lot of Java programs. Thus, a more interesting task is to '''write a snippet of Java code which, without modification, can be copy-and-pasted into the main method of any class and retrieve the class name'''. This is not trivial because in Java there is no way to use this
in a static method to get the class it's in. Listed below are several notable, commonly-cited solutions for this.
You can get the listing of the arguments to the java
command through a system property. The first one is the name of the main class that was run. This depends on a system property named "sun.java.command", which might not exist on all Java virtual machines.
public class ScriptName {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String program = System.getProperty("sun.java.command").split(" ")[0];
System.out.println("Program: " + program);
}
}
An alternate solution is to create a dummy inner class, and then retrieve its enclosing class (which is the class the main method is in) through reflection (though this will not work if the code is placed in a method in another source file--it will give the name of the class it is in inside that source file):
public class ScriptName {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Class c = new Object(){}.getClass().getEnclosingClass();
System.out.println("Program: " + c.getName());
}
}
A solution using the security manager:
public class ScriptName {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Class c = System.getSecurityManager().getClassContext()[0];
System.out.println("Program: " + c.getName());
}
}
A solution using the stack trace (requires Java 1.5+):
public class ScriptName {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String program = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace()[1].getClassName();
System.out.println("Program: " + program);
}
}
JavaScript
There is no capability within the ECMA-262 standard (the standard for ECMAScript, the language underlying JavaScript) for a function to determine its name. Since objects in JavaScript are first class objects, variables and properties are only references to objects. The name of an object might be said to be the name used to reference it, however a single object may have many variables and properties that reference it, or none.
In some implementations, the following (non–standard) code will work:
function foo() {
return arguments.callee.name;
}
But it will fail in in others. JavaScript also has anonymous functions that don't have a name, e.g.:
(function(){alert(arguments.callee.name);}())
returns an empty string or undefined
even where the first example works.
{{works with|Node.js}} Node.js has a global variable for this.
#!/usr/bin/env node
/*jslint nodejs:true */
function main() {
var program = __filename;
console.log("Program: " + program);
}
if (!module.parent) { main(); }
Jsish
#!/usr/bin/env jsish
/* Program name, in Jsish */
puts('Executable:', Info.executable());
puts('Argv0 :', Info.argv0());
{{out}}
prompt$ jsish programName.jsi
Executable: /usr/local/bin/jsish
Argv0 : /home/btiffin/forge/jsi/jsi-test/rosetta/programName.jsi
Julia
Julia strips the program file name from ARGS, so this information is not available to the program from its command line arguments. Instead it is accessible via Base.source_path().
prog = basename(Base.source_path())
println("This program file is \"", prog, "\".")
{{out}}
This program file is "program_name.jl".
Kotlin
// version 1.0.6
// 'progname.kt' packaged as 'progname.jar'
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
println(System.getProperty("sun.java.command")) // may not exist on all JVMs
println(System.getProperty("java.vm.name"))
}
{{out}}
progname.jar
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM
Lasso
#!/usr/bin/lasso9
stdoutnl("Program: " + $argv->first)
Output:
$ lasso9 script_name.lasso
Program: script_name.lasso
Liberty BASIC
nSize = _MAX_PATH + 2
lpFilename$ = space$(nSize); chr$(0)
calldll #kernel32, "GetModuleFileNameA", _
hModule as ulong, _
lpFilename$ as ptr, _
nSize as ulong, _
result as ulong
lpFilename$ = left$(lpFilename$,result)
print "Path to LB exe"
print lpFilename$
print "current program file (:last one on LRU list)"
print getLastLRU$(lbPath$)
end
Function getLastLRU$(lbPath$)
open lbPath$+"lbasic404.ini" for input as #1
while not(eof(#1))
line input #1, a$
if instr(a$, "recent files")<>0 then [readRecentFiles]
wend
getLastLRU$ = "* Failed: Recent files section not found *"
close #1
exit function
[readRecentFiles]
nRecent = val(word$(a$,1))
'print "nRecentFiles", nRecent
for i = 1 to nRecent
if eof(#1) then
getLastLRU$ = "* Failed: File ended while in recent files section *"
close #1
exit function
end if
line input #1, a$
'print i, a$
next
close #1
getLastLRU$ = a$
end function
Output:
Path to LB exe
C:\progs\Liberty BASIC v4.04\liberty.exe
current program file (:last one on LRU list)
C:\progs\Liberty BASIC v4.04\untitled.bas
Lingo
put _player.applicationName
-- "lsw.exe"
put _movie.name
-- "lsw_win_d11.dir"
LLVM
Like C, LLVM can use argv to access the executable's filename.
$ make
llvm-as scriptname.ll
llc -disable-cfi scriptname.bc
gcc -o scriptname scriptname.s
./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
Makefile
all: scriptname.ll
llvm-as scriptname.ll
llc scriptname.bc
gcc -o scriptname scriptname.s
./scriptname
clean:
-rm scriptname
-rm scriptname.s
-rm scriptname.bc
@msg_main = internal constant [13 x i8] c"Program: %s\0A\00"
declare i32 @printf(i8* noalias nocapture, ...)
define i32 @main(i32 %argc, i8** %argv) {
%program = load i8** %argv
call i32 (i8*, ...)* @printf(i8* getelementptr inbounds ([13 x i8]* @msg_main, i32 0, i32 0), i8* %program)
ret i32 0
}
Lua
Lua's arg is like C's argv.
#!/usr/bin/env lua
function main(arg)
local program = arg[0]
print("Program: " .. program)
end
if type(package.loaded[(...)]) ~= "userdata" then
main(arg)
else
module(..., package.seeall)
end
M2000 Interpreter
Module Checkit {
Declare GetModuleFileName Lib "kernel32.GetModuleFileNameW" {Long hModule, &lpFileName$, Long nSize}
a$=string$(chr$(0), 260)
namelen=GetModuleFileName(0, &a$, 260)
a$=left$(a$, namelen)
\\ normally m2000.exe is the caller of m2000.dll, the activeX script language
Print Mid$(a$, Rinstr(a$, "\")+1)="m2000.exe"
}
Checkit
\\ command$ return the file's path plus name of script
\\ we can use edit "callme.gsb" to paste these, and use USE callme to call it from M2000 console.
Module SayIt {
Show
Print command$
a$=key$
}
SayIt
Make
NAME=$(CURDIR)/$(word $(words $(MAKEFILE_LIST)),$(MAKEFILE_LIST))
all:
@echo $(NAME)
Mathematica
#!/usr/bin/env MathKernel -script
ScriptName[] = Piecewise[
{
{"Interpreted", Position[$CommandLine, "-script", 1] == {}}
},
$CommandLine[[Position[$CommandLine, "-script", 1][[1,1]] + 1]]
]
Program = ScriptName[];
Print["Program: " <> Program]
Mercury
:- module program_name.
:- interface.
:- import_module io.
:- pred main(io::di, io::uo) is det.
:- implementation.
main(!IO) :-
% The first argument is used as the program name if it is not otherwise
% available. (We could also have used the predicate io.progname_base/4
% if we did not want path preceding the program name.)
io.progname("", ProgName, !IO),
io.print_line(ProgName, !IO).
:- end_module program_name.
Mozart/Oz
Makefile:
all: test
test: scriptname
./scriptname
scriptname: scriptname.oz
ozc -x scriptname.oz
clean:
-rm scriptname
-rm *.exe
scriptname.oz:
functor
import
System
Application
Property
define
local ScriptName = {Property.get 'application.url'} in
{System.printInfo "Script name: "#ScriptName#"\n"}
{Application.exit 0}
end
end
Nemerle
using System.Environment;
...
def program_name = GetCommandLineArgs()[0];
...
NetRexx
/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref symbols nobinary
package org.rosettacode.samples
say 'Source: ' source
say 'Program:' System.getProperty('sun.java.command')
return
'''Output'''
Called directly:
$ java org.rosettacode.samples.RProgramName
Source: Java method RProgramName.nrx
Program: org.rosettacode.samples.RProgramName
When bundled inside a JAR file and referenced as the application entry point via the manifest's Main-Class header:
$ java -jar pn.jar
Source: Java method RProgramName.nrx
Program: pn.jar
newLISP
newLISP has a function, (main-args int) for this.
#!/usr/bin/env newlisp
(let ((program (main-args 1)))
(println (format "Program: %s" program))
(exit))
Nim
import os
echo getAppFilename() # Prints the full path of the executed file
echo paramStr(0) # Prints argv[0]
=={{header|Oberon-2}}== Works with oo2c Version 2
MODULE ProgramName;
IMPORT
NPCT:Args,
Out;
BEGIN
Out.Object("Program name: " + Args.Get(0));Out.Ln
END ProgramName.
Output:
Program name: ./ProgramName
=={{header|Objective-C}}==
scriptname.m:
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
@autoreleasepool {
char *program = argv[0];
printf("Program: %s\n", program);
// Alternatively:
NSString *program2 = [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processName];
NSLog(@"Program: %@\n", program2);
}
return 0;
}
$ gcc -o scriptname -framework foundation scriptname.m
$ ./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
OCaml
let () =
print_endline Sys.executable_name;
print_endline Sys.argv.(0)
$ ocamlc -o prog_name.bye prog_name.ml
$ ocamlopt -o prog_name.opt prog_name.ml
$ ocaml prog_name.ml
/usr/bin/ocaml
prog_name.ml
$ ./prog_name.bye
./prog_name.bye
./prog_name.bye
$ ./prog_name.opt
/tmp/prog_name.opt
./prog_name.opt
Octave
function main()
program = program_name();
printf("Program: %s", program);
endfunction
main();
Ol
First argument of vm-args is an executing program name.
(print (car *vm-args*))
Order
This is relatively trivial in Order, as the program being executed is a macro expression in the current C program file being read by the compiler:
__FILE__
When including another file containing another ORDER_PP
expression, within that file the FILE
macro will expand to the name of that file; but arguably that expression constitutes a separate Order program within the greater C project.
PARI/GP
GP does not have access to the name of the program running (especially since it is usually run from the REPL gp). PARI has the same access to argv[0]
as [[#C|C]].
Pascal
program ScriptName;
var
prog : String;
begin
prog := ParamStr(0);
write('Program: ');
writeln(prog)
end.
Perl
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
sub main {
my $program = $0;
print "Program: $program\n";
}
unless(caller) { main; }
$0
includes the full path if a script is run as say perl /some/dir/foo.pl
. The FindBin
module can give just the basename. This can be good for printing in diagnostics etc.
use FindBin;
print "Program name $FindBin::Script\n";
Perl 6
{{works with|rakudo|2015-10-16}} In Perl 6, the name of the program being executed is in the special global variable $*PROGRAM-NAME.
say $*PROGRAM-NAME;
Phix
puts(1,command_line()[2])
PHP
PHP has a global dictionary for this.
<?php
$program = $_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"];
echo "Program: $program\n";
?>
PicoLisp
The function '[http://software-lab.de/doc/refC.html#cmd cmd]' returns the command name.
: (cmd)
-> "/usr/bin/picolisp"
PowerBASIC
Previous versions of PowerBASIC ([[PB/Win]] 8 or older; [[PB/CC]] 4 or older) have to make an [[API]] call:
#INCLUDE "Win32API.inc"
'[...]
DIM fullpath AS ASCIIZ * 260, appname AS STRING
GetModuleFileNameA 0, fullpath, 260
IF INSTR(fullpath, "\") THEN
appname = MID$(fullpath, INSTR(-1, fullpath, "\") + 1)
ELSE
appname = fullpath
END IF
{{works with|PowerBASIC for Windows|9}} {{works with|PowerBASIC Console Compiler|5}}
Recent versions of PowerBASIC provide the EXE
object; EXE.NAME$
returns the program's name, while EXE.NAMEX$
returns the program's name and extension. (EXE.EXTN$
returns the extension only.) So, to get the program's name, we do this:
appname = EXE.NAMEX$
PowerShell
# write this in file <program.ps1>
$MyInvocation.MyCommand.Name
# launch with <.\program>
Output:
program.ps1
Prolog
% SWI-Prolog version 8.0.0 for i686-linux.
% This will find itself, and return the knowledge base it is in.
file_name(F) :- true
, M = user % M is the module .
, P = file_name(_) % P is the predicate .
, source_file(M:P, F) % F is the file .
, \+ predicate_property(M:P, imported_from(_))
.
Alternatively, you may prefer a list of all your knowledge bases; adding the following code to each of your knowledge bases will allow you to query findall(F, source_file(this_is_one_of_my_files, F), L).
.
:- multifile(this_is_one_of_my_files). this_is_one_of_my_files.
PureBasic
PureBasic provides a way to retrieve the filename of the program being executed. It includes the file's path.
If OpenConsole()
PrintN(ProgramFilename())
Print(#CRLF$ + #CRLF$ + "Press ENTER to exit"): Input()
CloseConsole()
EndIf
Sample output when executing the above program compiled to an executible file called 'program name.exe':
H:\Data\Rosetta Code\program name.exe
Python
Python has at least two ways to get the script name: the traditional ARGV and the inspect module.
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
def main():
program = sys.argv[0]
print("Program: %s" % program)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
#!/usr/bin/env python
import inspect
def main():
program = inspect.getfile(inspect.currentframe())
print("Program: %s" % program)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
R
R's syntax is complicated, but doable.
#!/usr/bin/env Rscript
getProgram <- function(args) {
sub("--file=", "", args[grep("--file=", args)])
}
args <- commandArgs(trailingOnly = FALSE)
program <- getProgram(args)
cat("Program: ", program, "\n")
q("no")
Racket
#!/usr/bin/env racket
#lang racket
(define (program) (find-system-path 'run-file))
(module+ main (printf "Program: ~a\n" (program)))
Raven
ARGS list " " join "%s\n" print
{{out}}
raven arg_file.rv
REXX
The [[REXX|Rexx]] PARSE SOURCE
instruction parses data describing the source of the program running.
The language processor returns a string that does not change while the program is running.
The source string contains operating system name, followed by either COMMAND
, FUNCTION
, or
SUBROUTINE
, depending on whether the program was called as a host command or from a
function call in an expression or using the CALL
instruction.
These two tokens are followed by the complete path specification of the program file.
It should be noted that the format of the complete path varies depending upon the operating system.
/* Rexx */
Parse source . . pgmPath
Say pgmPath
;Output
$ rexx RProgramName.rex
/tmp/RProgramName.rex
REXX does not support the use of arg(0) to access the program name. A workaround is to use a shell wrapper script to obtain and provide the invocation name of the wrapper:
#!/bin/sh
rexxbit.rexx $0 $*
Here is a rexx script that makes use of this:
say "The program is called " arg(1)
On TSO, this program
/*REXX program RANG1 in PDS N561985.PRIV.CLIST W. Pachl */
Parse Source a b c
Say 'a='a
Say 'b='!!b
Say 'c='c
yields
a=TSO
b=COMMAND
c=RANG1 SYS00056 N561985.PRIV.CLIST ? TSO ISPF ?
version with various types of invokes
Used under Windows/XP and Windows 7 with the following REXXes: :::* Brexx :::* R4 REXX :::* REGINA REXX :::* Personal REXX :::* ROO REXX :::* ooRexx
/*REXX pgm displays the name (& possible path) of the REXX program name.*/
parse version _version
parse source _system _howInvoked _path
say right(_version '◄──►' space(arg(1) arg(2)), 79, '─') /*show title.*/
say " REXX's name of system being used:" _system
say ' how the REXX program was invoked:' _howInvoked
say ' name of the REXX program and path:' _path
if arg()>1 then return 0 /*don't let this program recurse.*/
/*Mama said that cursing is a sin*/
/*invoke ourself with a 2nd arg.*/
call prog_nam , 'subroutine' /*call ourself as a subroutine. */
zz = prog_nam( , 'function') /* " " " " function. */
/*stick a fork in it, we're done.*/
'''output''' when using '''BREXX''' with the input of: command
───────────────────────────────────────────brexx 2.1.0 Mar 11 2003 ◄──► command
REXX's name of system being used: MSDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: prog_nam.rex J:\-\BREXX\REXX16.EXE D:\WIN
DOWS\SYSTEM32\COMMAND.COM
────────────────────────────────────────brexx 2.1.0 Mar 11 2003 ◄──► subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: MSDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: PROCEDURE
name of the REXX program and path: prog_nam.rex J:\-\BREXX\REXX16.EXE D:\WIN
DOWS\SYSTEM32\COMMAND.COM
──────────────────────────────────────────brexx 2.1.0 Mar 11 2003 ◄──► function
REXX's name of system being used: MSDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: prog_nam.rex J:\-\BREXX\REXX16.EXE D:\WIN
DOWS\SYSTEM32\COMMAND.COM
Output note (above): note that the wrap-around of the output is an artifact of the BREXX interpreter, not the pasting of this output.
'''output''' when using '''R4 REXX''' with the input of: command
─────────────────────────────────────────────────REXX-r4 4.00 16 Aug 2015 ◄──► command
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: C:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
───────────────────────────────────────REXX-r4 4.00 16 Aug 2015 ◄──► subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: SUBROUTINE
name of the REXX program and path: C:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
─────────────────────────────────────────REXX-r4 4.00 16 Aug 2015 ◄──► function
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: C:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
'''output''' when using '''REGINA REXX''' with the input of: command
────────────────────────────────────REXX-Regina_3.9.1(MT) 5.00 5 Apr 2015 ◄──► command
REXX's name of system being used: WIN32
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: c:\prog_nam.rex
──────────────────────────REXX-Regina_3.9.1(MT) 5.00 5 Apr 2015 ◄──► subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: WIN32
how the REXX program was invoked: SUBROUTINE
name of the REXX program and path: c:\PROG_NAM.rex
────────────────────────────REXX-Regina_3.9.1(MT) 5.00 5 Apr 2015 ◄──► function
REXX's name of system being used: WIN32
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: c:\PROG_NAM.rex
'''output''' when using '''Personal REXX''' with the input of: command
────────────────────────────────────REXX/Personal 4.00 21 Mar 1992 ◄──► command
REXX's name of system being used: PCDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX
─────────────────────────────────REXX/Personal 4.00 21 Mar 1992 ◄──► subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: PCDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: SUBROUTINE
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX
───────────────────────────────────REXX/Personal 4.00 21 Mar 1992 ◄──► function
REXX's name of system being used: PCDOS
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX
'''output''' when using '''ROO REXX''' with the input of: command
─────────────────────────────────────────REXX-roo 4.00 28 Jan 2007 ◄──► command
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
──────────────────────────────────────REXX-roo 4.00 28 Jan 2007 ◄──► subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: SUBROUTINE
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
────────────────────────────────────────REXX-roo 4.00 28 Jan 2007 ◄──► function
REXX's name of system being used: Win32
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: D:\PROG_NAM.REX * * PROG_NAM
'''output''' when using '''ooRexx''' with the input of: command
-----------------------------------REXX-ooRexx_4.1.2(MT) 6.03 28 Aug 2012 ?--?
REXX's name of system being used: WindowsNT
how the REXX program was invoked: COMMAND
name of the REXX program and path: E:\PROG_NAM.REX
-------------------------REXX-ooRexx_4.1.2(MT) 6.03 28 Aug 2012 ?--? subroutine
REXX's name of system being used: WindowsNT
how the REXX program was invoked: SUBROUTINE
name of the REXX program and path: E:\PROG_NAM.REX
---------------------------REXX-ooRexx_4.1.2(MT) 6.03 28 Aug 2012 ?--? function
REXX's name of system being used: WindowsNT
how the REXX program was invoked: FUNCTION
name of the REXX program and path: E:\PROG_NAM.REX
Output note of ooRexx (which should be shown in the ooRexx language section): the output from ooRexx (in this Classic REXX section) needs to be corrected and re-done; the title is different, it is not showing the argument supplied, and it's incorrectly translating the (solid) left and right arrow characters.
Ring
see "Active Source File Name : " + filename() + nl
output
Active Source File Name : tests\filename.ring
Check the main file in the program
if sysargv[2] = filename()
see "I'm the main program file!" + nl
# we can run tests here!
else
see "I'm a sub file in a program" + nl
ok
Ruby
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
puts "Path: #{$PROGRAM_NAME}" # or puts "Path: #{$0}"
puts "Name: #{File.basename $0}"
For example,
$ ruby script.rb
Path: script.rb
Name: script.rb
$ ruby ../rc/script.rb
Path: ../rc/script.rb
Name: script.rb
$ ruby -e 'load "script.rb"'
Path: -e
Name: -e
Rust
scriptname.rs:
fn main() {
println!("Program: {}", std::env::args().next().unwrap());
}
Example:
$ rustc scriptname.rs
$ ./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
SAC
scriptname.sac:
use StdIO: all;
use Array: all;
use String: { string };
use CommandLine: all;
int main() {
program = argv(0);
printf("Program: %s\n", program);
return(0);
}
Makefile:
all: scriptname
scriptname: scriptname.sac
sac2c -o scriptname scriptname.sac
clean:
-rm scriptname
-rm scriptname.c
Example:
$ make
sac2c -o scriptname scriptname.sac
$ ./scriptname
Program: ./scriptname
Scala
object ScriptName extends App {
println(s"Program of instantiated object: ${this.getClass.getName}")
// Not recommended, due various implementations
println(s"Program via enviroment: ${System.getProperty("sun.java.command")}")
}
Scheme
{{works with|Chicken Scheme}} Getting the program name is tricky. When interpreted, the script name will be printed. When compiled, the executable name will be printed.
#!/bin/sh
#|
exec csi -ss $0 ${1+"$@"}
exit
|#
(use posix)
(require-extension srfi-1) ; lists
(require-extension srfi-13) ; strings
(define (main args)
(let ((prog (cdr (program))))
(display (format "Program: ~a\n" prog))
(exit)))
(define (program)
(if (string=? (car (argv)) "csi")
(let ((s-index (list-index (lambda (x) (string-contains x "-s")) (argv))))
(if (number? s-index)
(cons 'interpreted (list-ref (argv) (+ 1 s-index)))
(cons 'unknown "")))
(cons 'compiled (car (argv)))))
(if (equal? (car (program)) 'compiled)
(main (cdr (argv))))
Seed7
The function ''path(PROGRAM)'' returns the path of the file executed. When the program is interpreted this is the path of the source file. When the program is compiled this is the path of the executable. The functions ''dir(PROGRAM)'' and ''file(PROGRAM)'' deliver the directory respectivly file name of the program path.
$ include "seed7_05.s7i";
const proc: main is func
local
var integer: i is 0;
begin
writeln("Program path: " <& path(PROGRAM));
writeln("Program directory: " <& dir(PROGRAM));
writeln("Program file: " <& file(PROGRAM));
end func;
Output when the program is interpreted:
Program path: /home/anyuser/seed7_5/prg/programname.sd7
Program directory: /home/anyuser/seed7_5/prg
Program file: programname.sd7
Output when the program is compiled:
Program path: /home/anyuser/seed7_5/prg/programname
Program directory: /home/anyuser/seed7_5/prg
Program file: programname
Sidef
say __MAIN__;
if (__MAIN__ != __FILE__) {
say "This file has been included!";
}
Smalltalk
{{works with|GNU Smalltalk}} Note that this only works when run as "./scriptname.st", because the shebang must force the script name onto ARGV.
"exec" "gst" "-f" "$0" "$0" "$@"
"exit"
| program |
program := Smalltalk getArgv: 1.
Transcript show: 'Program: ', program; cr.
{{works with|Smalltalk/X}} Works when run in script mode or in a workspace.
| program |
program := Smalltalk commandLine first.
Transcript show: 'Program: ', program; cr.
Standard ML
#!/usr/bin/env sml
let
val program = CommandLine.name ()
in
print ("Program: " ^ program ^ "\n")
end;
Tcl
#!/usr/bin/env tclsh
proc main {args} {
set program $::argv0
puts "Program: $program"
}
if {$::argv0 eq [info script]} {
main {*}$::argv
}
TXR
Given this code in program-name.txr
, marked executable:
#!/usr/local/bin/txr -B
@(bind my-name @self-path)
If we run it as an executable:
$ ./program-name.txr
my-name="./program-name.txr"
If we pass it as an argument to txr
:
$ txr program-name.txr
my-name="program-name.txr"
If we evaluate the same thing on the command line:
$ txr -c '@(bind my-name @self-path)'
my-name="cmdline"
If we pass in the code on standard input:
$ txr -
@(bind my-name @self-path)
my-name="stdin"
UNIX Shell
{{works with|Bourne Shell}}
#!/bin/sh
echo "Program: $0"
Vala
Get name of program and print to console:
public static void main(string[] args){
string command_name = args[0];
stdout.printf("%s\n", command_name);
}
Output for program named "filename":
./filename
VBA
VBA can retrieve the name of the program hosting the VBA code using the Application
object:
This is mostly useful for code that is shared between, say, [[wp:Microsoft Excel|Microsoft Excel]] and [[wp:Microsoft Word|Microsoft Word]], but has different requirements or actions depending on where it's running.
Wscript.Echo "FullName:",Wscript.FullName
## vbscript
vbscript provides the Wscript object. Among its properties are the following:
```vbscript
Wscript.Echo "FullName:",Wscript.FullName
Wscript.Echo "Name:",Wscript.Name
Wscript.Echo "Path:",Wscript.Path
Wscript.Echo "ScriptFullName:",Wscript.ScriptFullName
Wscript.Echo "ScriptName:",Wscript.ScriptName
FullName: C:\WINDOWS\System32\CScript.exe
Name: Windows Script Host
Path: C:\WINDOWS\System32
ScriptFullName: D:\Utils\test.vbs
ScriptName: test.vbs
Visual Basic
Visual Basic provides the App
object, which has a property called EXEName
that contains the program's filename ''without the extension''. (For most uses, this doesn't matter, but for code shared between, for example, a program and a screensaver, it can be important.) So, if a program is called "MyVBapp.exe", retreiving the value of App.EXEName
would look like this:
appname = App.EXEName 'appname = "MyVBapp"
Alternately, Visual Basic can make an [[API]] call:
Declare Function GetModuleFileName Lib "kernel32" Alias "GetModuleFileNameA" (ByVal hModule As Long, ByVal lpFileName As String, ByVal nSize As Long) As Long
Dim fullpath As String * 260, appname As String, namelen As Long
namelen = GetModuleFileName (0, fullpath, 260)
fullpath = Left$(fullpath, namelen)
If InStr(fullpath, "\") Then
appname = Mid$(fullpath, InStrRev(fullpath, "\") + 1)
Else
appname = fullpath
End If
x86 Assembly
{{Works with|Nasm}}
Linux
Makefile:
FORMAT=-f elf
RUN=./
BIN=scriptname
OBJ=scriptname.o
all: test
test: $(BIN)
$(RUN)$(BIN)
$(BIN): $(OBJ)
ld -o $(BIN) $(OBJ)
$(OBJ): scriptname.asm
nasm $(FORMAT) -o $(OBJ) scriptname.asm
clean:
-rm $(BIN)
-rm $(OBJ)
scriptname.asm:
bits 32
section .data
stdout equ 1
sys_write equ 4
sys_exit equ 1
kernel equ 0x80
program db "Program: ", 0
programlen equ $-program
nl db "", 10, 0
nllen equ $-nl
section .bss
scriptname resd 1
scriptnamelen resd 1
section .text
global _start
strlen: ; eax: a string ending in 0
push eax ; cache eax
.strloop:
mov bl, byte [eax]
cmp bl, 0
je .strret ; return len if bl == 0
inc eax ; else eax++
jmp .strloop
.strret:
pop ebx ; ebx = cached eax
sub eax, ebx ; eax -= ebx
ret ; eax = len
_start:
mov eax, esp
add eax, 4
mov eax, [eax]
mov dword [scriptname], eax
mov eax, sys_write
mov ebx, stdout
mov ecx, program
mov edx, programlen
int kernel
mov dword eax, [scriptname]
call strlen
mov dword [scriptnamelen], eax
mov eax, sys_write
mov ebx, stdout
mov dword ecx, [scriptname]
mov dword edx, [scriptnamelen]
int kernel
mov eax, sys_write
mov ebx, stdout
mov ecx, nl
mov edx, nllen
int kernel
mov eax, sys_exit
mov ebx, 0
int kernel
FreeBSD/Mac OS X
Makefile:
# FreeBSD defaults
FORMAT=-f elf
RUN=./
BIN=scriptname
OBJ=scriptname.o
# Mac OS X
ifeq ($(shell uname -s),Darwin)
FORMAT=-f macho
MINV=-macosx_version_min 10.6
endif
all: test
test: $(BIN)
$(RUN)$(BIN)
$(BIN): $(OBJ)
ld -o $(BIN) $(MINV) $(OBJ)
$(OBJ): scriptname.asm
nasm $(FORMAT) -o $(OBJ) scriptname.asm
clean:
-rm $(BIN)
-rm $(OBJ)
scriptname.asm:
bits 32
section .data
stdout equ 1
sys_write equ 4
sys_exit equ 1
kernel equ 0x80
program db "Program: ", 0
programlen equ $-program
nl db "", 10, 0
nllen equ $-nl
section .bss
scriptname resd 1
scriptnamelen resd 1
section .text
global start
strlen: ; eax: a string ending in 0
push eax ; cache eax
.strloop:
mov bl, byte [eax]
cmp bl, 0
je .strret ; return len if bl == 0
inc eax ; else eax++
jmp .strloop
.strret:
pop ebx ; ebx = cached eax
sub eax, ebx ; eax -= ebx
ret ; eax = len
start:
mov eax, esp
add eax, 4
mov eax, [eax]
mov dword [scriptname], eax
push programlen
push program
push stdout
mov eax, sys_write
sub esp, 4
int kernel
add esp, 4 + 4 * 3
mov dword eax, [scriptname]
call strlen
mov dword [scriptnamelen], eax
push dword [scriptnamelen]
push dword [scriptname]
push stdout
mov eax, sys_write
sub esp, 4
int kernel
add esp, 4 + 4 * 3
push nllen
push nl
push stdout
mov eax, sys_write
sub esp, 4
int kernel
add esp, 4 + 4 * 3
push 0
mov eax, sys_exit
sub esp, 4
int kernel
Windows
Makefile:
FORMAT=-f win32
BIN=scriptname.exe
OBJ=scriptname.obj
RUN=
all: test
test: $(BIN)
$(RUN)$(BIN)
$(BIN): $(OBJ)
golink /fo $(BIN) $(OBJ) /console kernel32.dll Msvcrt.dll
$(OBJ): scriptname.asm
nasm $(FORMAT) -o $(OBJ) scriptname.asm
clean:
-rm $(BIN)
-rm $(OBJ)
scriptname.asm:
bits 32
section .data
program db "Program: ", 0
programlen equ $-program
nl db "", 13, 10, 0
nllen equ $-nl
stdouthandle equ -11
section .bss
stdout resd 1
charswritten resd 1
env resd 1
argc resd 1
argv resd 255
scriptname resd 1
scriptnamelen resd 1
section .text
global Start
extern GetStdHandle
extern __getmainargs
extern WriteConsoleA
extern ExitProcess
strlen: ; eax: a string ending in 0
push eax ; cache eax
.strloop:
mov bl, byte [eax]
cmp bl, 0
je .strret ; return len if bl == 0
inc eax ; else eax++
jmp .strloop
.strret:
pop ebx ; ebx = cached eax
sub eax, ebx ; eax -= ebx
ret ; eax = len
Start:
push 0
push env
push argv
push argc
call __getmainargs
mov eax, [argv]
mov eax, [eax]
mov [scriptname], eax
add esp, 4 * 4
push stdouthandle
call GetStdHandle
mov [stdout], eax
add esp, 4 * 1
push 0
push charswritten
push programlen
push program
push dword [stdout]
call WriteConsoleA
add esp, 4 * 5
mov eax, [scriptname]
call strlen
mov [scriptnamelen], eax
push 0
push charswritten
push dword [scriptnamelen]
push dword [scriptname]
push dword [stdout]
call WriteConsoleA
add esp, 4 * 5
push 0
push charswritten
push nllen
push nl
push dword [stdout]
call WriteConsoleA
add esp, 4 * 5
push 0
call ExitProcess
Yabasic
print peek$("program_name")
s$ = system$("cd")
n = len(s$)
print left$(s$, n - 2), "\\", peek$("program_name")
zkl
C's argv is exposed to the zkl runtime so if file bbb.zkl contains:
#!/Homer/craigd/Bin/zkl
println(System.argv);
Then (on Unix like OSes)
./bbb.zkl
zkl bbb.zkl
both print
L("/home/craigd/Projects/ZKL/Bin/zkl","bbb.zkl")
On Unix, zkl is actually a shell script:
#!/bin/sh
# A bash script to run zkl if you haven't jumped
# through all the Unix hoops to put the bits in the "right" places
# You can change zklRoot to your build directory,
# change the script name to "zkl" and put it in your bin path.
# You may need to chmod a+x <this script>
if [ -z $zklRoot ]; then
zklRoot=$HOME/ZKL
if [ ! -d $zklRoot ]; then
zklRoot=$HOME/Projects/ZKL
fi
fi
export zklRoot
#set -o noglob
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$zklRoot/Lib $zklRoot/Bin/zkl "$@"
On Windows, no launch script (windows knows where the DLLs are) but argv[0] can be messed up.
{{omit from|GUISS}} {{omit from|Retro}} {{omit from|ZX Spectrum Basic}} {{omit from|Maxima}}