hi
i have a function
printValues()
{
var=$#
count=0
qName=""
while
do
if
then
echo QManager Name $1
fi
if
then
echo Cluster Name$2
fi
if (( $count != 0 && $count != 1 ))
then
... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have below sample data file. I want to count the delimiter no of times repeated and replace with new line characters. The new line characters appear somtimes in between of the records and end of the record:
input file:
jack;1500;manager;boston\n
jim;2000;\n
developer;texas\n... (7 Replies)
Hi;
I want to write a shell script that will split a string with no delimiter.
Basically the script will read a line from a file.
For example the line it read from the file contains:
99234523
These values are never the same but the length will always be 8.
How do i split this... (8 Replies)
hi all,
suppose a string:
abc/def/ghi/jkl/mn.txt
and i want to get the file name without the path.
however, different files have different paths, therefore the number of delimiter is uncertain.
thanks so much! (3 Replies)
Hi I wrote shell script for count the deleimeters and send it to reject file
which are exeeseding number of count.
But script is not working properly...
Can you please check the below script and modify it as required.
ex :
1,abc
2,mno
3,pqr
4,xyz,error
As per the requiredment last... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm stuck-up in finding a way to skip the delimiter which come within double quotes using awk or any other better option. can someone please help me out.
Below are the details:
Delimited: |
Sample data: 742433154|"SYN|THESIS MED CHEM PTY.... (2 Replies)
Hi
I want to check delimiter in file. Delimiter in my file is ~|*
sample of file :
ABC~|*edgf~|*T1J333~|*20121130
ABC~|*sdaf~|*T1J333~|*20121130
ABC~|*fsdg~|*T1J333~|*20121130
ABC~|*dfsg~|*T1J333~|*20121130
in this i want to count number delimiter occur is 4 in each row if count is... (21 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file where in it has lot of records in it.
I have written below stuff to find the number of fields as shown below
`awk -F '|' '{print NF-1}' file.txt| head -1`
how do i proceed if in case any record in particular is having more number of delimiters, if it having??? what... (7 Replies)
The input file is a .dat file which is delimited by null (^@ in Linux). On a windows PC it looks something like this (numbers are masked with 1).
https://i.imgur.com/nta2Gqp.jpg
The entire file is in one row but it has multiple records - each record contains 80 fields i.e. there are 81 counts... (9 Replies)
I have a huge file (around 4-5 GB containing 20 million rows) which has text like:
<EOFD>11<EOFD>22<EORD>2<EOFD>2222<EOFD>3333<EORD>3<EOFD>44<EOFD>55<EORD>66<EOFD>888<EOFD>9999<EORD>
Actually above is an extracted file from a Sql Server with each field delimited by <EOFD> and each row ends... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: amvip
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
strpos
STRPOS(3) 1 STRPOS(3)strpos - Find the position of the first occurrence of a substring in a stringSYNOPSIS
mixed strpos (string $haystack, mixed $needle, [int $offset])
DESCRIPTION
Find the numeric position of the first occurrence of $needle in the $haystack string.
PARAMETERS
o $haystack
- The string to search in.
o $needle
- If $needle is not a string, it is converted to an integer and applied as the ordinal value of a character.
o $offset
- If specified, search will start this number of characters counted from the beginning of the string. Unlike strrpos(3) and strri-
pos(3), the offset cannot be negative.
RETURN VALUES
Returns the position of where the needle exists relative to the beginning of the $haystack string (independent of offset). Also note that
string positions start at 0, and not 1.
Returns FALSE if the needle was not found.
Warning
This function may return Boolean FALSE, but may also return a non-Boolean value which evaluates to FALSE. Please read the section on
Booleans for more information. Use the === operator for testing the return value of this function.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
Using ===
<?php
$mystring = 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);
// Note our use of ===. Simply == would not work as expected
// because the position of 'a' was the 0th (first) character.
if ($pos === false) {
echo "The string '$findme' was not found in the string '$mystring'";
} else {
echo "The string '$findme' was found in the string '$mystring'";
echo " and exists at position $pos";
}
?>
Example #2
Using !==
<?php
$mystring = 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);
// The !== operator can also be used. Using != would not work as expected
// because the position of 'a' is 0. The statement (0 != false) evaluates
// to false.
if ($pos !== false) {
echo "The string '$findme' was found in the string '$mystring'";
echo " and exists at position $pos";
} else {
echo "The string '$findme' was not found in the string '$mystring'";
}
?>
Example #3
Using an offset
<?php
// We can search for the character, ignoring anything before the offset
$newstring = 'abcdef abcdef';
$pos = strpos($newstring, 'a', 1); // $pos = 7, not 0
?>
NOTES
Note
This function is binary-safe.
SEE ALSO stripos(3), strrpos(3), strripos(3), strstr(3), strpbrk(3), substr(3), preg_match(3).
PHP Documentation Group STRPOS(3)