I know that the below command will cut the 13th field from test.txt file
The answer would be,
If we see the 3 rd one, it has more than 2 characters. So i wanted to check this in if condition and i want to get the output if the 13th field has more than 2 characters.
Any help would be greately appreciated!!!
Last edited by Franklin52; 12-19-2012 at 03:20 AM..
Reason: Please use code tags for data and code samples
I'm extremely new to scripting and linux in general, so please bear with me. The class I'm taking gives virtually no instruction at all, and so I'm trying to learn everything off the web.
Anyway, I'm trying to extract characters that follow after a specific pattern ( '<B><FONT FACE="Arial">' ) but... (3 Replies)
I have a requirement where i have to read from a .sh file a text lying bet characters like 'SELECT' & ';'...Please help me out in this. I am new to shell scripting. (2 Replies)
Hi All,
i am trying to remove all special charecters().,/\~!@#%^$*&^_- and others from a tab delimited file.
I am using the following code.
while read LINE
do
echo $LINE | tr -d '=;:`"<>,./?!@#$%^&(){}'|tr -d "-"|tr -d "'" | tr -d "_"
done < trial.txt > output.txt
Problem
... (10 Replies)
I have a text file that looks like this:
I want to delete the last character of first column in all rows so that my output looks like this:
Thanks a lot! (1 Reply)
Can I just say, this is such a frustrating and yet enormously rewarding field of study. I'm in the middle of configuring GeekTool (Uh oh, stupid n00b) and I really only have one question.
I'm using Automator to grab a RSS feed, having GeekTool continually run that application every 10 minutes,... (7 Replies)
When I use vi to see what's in the file I get this:
int add1(int x) {^M return x + 1;^M}
^Mint subtract1(int x) {^M return x - 1;^M}
^Mint double_it(int x) {^M return x * 2;^M}
^Mint halve_it(int x) {^Mreturn x / 2;^M}
^Mint main() {^M int myint;^M int result;^M ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a text file which when I do a 'cat' on it looks like below with the OK’s showing in green and any FAIL showing in red.
cat filename output:
===== MySQL Query Check =====
DB mpuser is alive. 733 = Expected 733 Tables. OK ]
DB mpuser_wf is alive. 61 =... (6 Replies)
Version Info:
$ cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.8 (Tikanga)
$
$ uname -a
Linux stryker138 2.6.18-308.13.1.el5 #1 SMP Thu Jul 26 05:45:09 EDT 2012 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
I redirected manpage of ksh command's output to a text file as shown... (6 Replies)
I am using flatfile, in that flat file we are getting the junk chars
1)I21001f<82>^Me<85>!h49 Service Charge
2) I21001f‚
e...!h49 Service Charge
please tell me how to remove all junk chars in unix scripts. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Talari
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
gimp::net
Net(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net(3)NAME
Gimp::Net - Communication module for the gimp-perl server.
SYNOPSIS
use Gimp;
DESCRIPTION
For Gimp::Net (and thus commandline and remote scripts) to work, you first have to install the "Perl-Server" extension somewhere where Gimp
can find it (e.g in your .gimp/plug-ins/ directory). Usually this is done automatically while installing the Gimp extension. If you have a
menu entry "<Xtns"/Perl-Server> then it is probably installed.
The Perl-Server can either be started from the "<Xtns"> menu in Gimp, or automatically when a perl script can't find a running Perl-Server.
When started from within The Gimp, the Perl-Server will create a unix domain socket to which local clients can connect. If an authorization
password is given to the Perl-Server (by defining the environment variable "GIMP_HOST" before starting The Gimp), it will also listen on a
tcp port (default 10009). Since the password is transmitted in cleartext, using the Perl-Server over tcp effectively lowers the security of
your network to the level of telnet. Even worse: the current Gimp::Net-protocol can be used for denial of service attacks, i.e. crashing
the Perl-Server. There also *might* be buffer-overflows (although I do care a lot for these).
ENVIRONMENT
The environment variable "GIMP_HOST" specifies the default server to contact and/or the password to use. The syntax is [auth@][tcp/]host-
name[:port] for tcp, [auth@]unix/local/socket/path for unix and spawn/ for a private gimp instance. Examples are:
www.yahoo.com # just kidding ;)
yahoo.com:11100 # non-standard port
tcp/yahoo.com # make sure it uses tcp
authorize@tcp/yahoo.com:123 # full-fledged specification
unix/tmp/unx # use unix domain socket
password@unix/tmp/test # additionally use a password
authorize@ # specify authorization only
spawn/ # use a private gimp instance
spawn/nodata # pass --no-data switch
spawn/gui # don't pass -n switch
CALLBACKS
net()
is called after we have succesfully connected to the server. Do your dirty work in this function, or see Gimp::Fu for a better solu-
tion.
FUNCTIONS
server_quit()
sends the perl server a quit command.
get_connection()
return a connection id which uniquely identifies the current connection.
set_connection(conn_id)
set the connection to use on subsequent commands. "conn_id" is the connection id as returned by get_connection().
BUGS
(Ver 0.04) This module is much faster than it ought to be... Silly that I wondered wether I should implement it in perl or C, since perl is
soo fast.
AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com>
SEE ALSO perl(1), Gimp.
perl v5.8.0 2001-12-06 Net(3)