		/*    globals.c
		 *
		 *    Copyright (C) 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, by Larry Wall and others
		 *
		 *    You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public
		 *    License or the Artistic License, as specified in the README file.
		 *
		 */
		
		/*
		 * "For the rest, they shall represent the other Free Peoples of the World:
		 * Elves, Dwarves, and Men." --Elrond
		 */
		
		/* This file exists to #include "perl.h" _ONCE_ with
		 * PERL_IN_GLOBALS_C defined. That causes various global varaiables
		 * in perl.h and other files it includes to be _defined_ (and initialized)
		 * rather than just declared.
		 *
		 * There is a #include "perlapi.h" which makes use of the fact
		 * that the object file created from this file will be included by linker
		 * (to resolve global variables). perlapi.h mention various other "API"
		 * functions not used by perl itself, but the functions get
		 * pulled into the perl executable via the refrerence here.
		 *
		 * Two printf() like functions have also found their way here.
		 * Most likely by analogy to the API scheme above (as perl doesn't
		 * use them) but they probably belong elsewhere the obvious place
		 * being in perlio.c
		 *
		*/
		
		#include "INTERN.h"
		#define PERL_IN_GLOBALS_C
		#include "perl.h"
		
		int
		Perl_fprintf_nocontext(PerlIO *stream, const char *format, ...)
      ######    {
		    dTHXs;
      ######        va_list(arglist);
      ######        va_start(arglist, format);
      ######        return PerlIO_vprintf(stream, format, arglist);
		}
		
		int
		Perl_printf_nocontext(const char *format, ...)
      ######    {
		    dTHX;
      ######        va_list(arglist);
      ######        va_start(arglist, format);
      ######        return PerlIO_vprintf(PerlIO_stdout(), format, arglist);
		}
		
		#include "perlapi.h"		/* bring in PL_force_link_funcs */
		
		/*
		 * Local variables:
		 * c-indentation-style: bsd
		 * c-basic-offset: 4
		 * indent-tabs-mode: t
		 * End:
		 *
		 * ex: set ts=8 sts=4 sw=4 noet:
		 */
