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(g77-295.info)Nothing Happens


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Nothing Happens
---------------

   It is occasionally reported that a "simple" program, such as a
"Hello, World!" program, does nothing when it is run, even though the
compiler reported no errors, despite the program containing nothing
other than a simple `PRINT' statement.

   This most often happens because the program has been compiled and
linked on a UNIX system and named `test', though other names can lead
to similarly unexpected run-time behavior on various systems.

   Essentially this problem boils down to giving your program a name
that is already known to the shell you are using to identify some other
program, which the shell continues to execute instead of your program
when you invoke it via, for example:

     sh# test
     sh#

   Under UNIX and many other system, a simple command name invokes a
searching mechanism that might well not choose the program located in
the current working directory if there is another alternative (such as
the `test' command commonly installed on UNIX systems).

   The reliable way to invoke a program you just linked in the current
directory under UNIX is to specify it using an explicit pathname, as in:

     sh# ./test
      Hello, World!
     sh#

   Users who encounter this problem should take the time to read up on
how their shell searches for commands, how to set their search path,
and so on.  The relevant UNIX commands to learn about include `man',
`info' (on GNU systems), `setenv' (or `set' and `env'), `which', and
`find'.


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