09-02-2013
Thank youuuuuu
Thank you Scott
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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi guys.
in bash is there any other way of limiting the time displayed to HH:MM
appart from
(date +"%H:%M") and (date +"%R")?
i want to input time into a database in the form HH:MM
have tried NOW() but this gives me HH:MM:SS
thanks in advance (1 Reply)
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a comma delimited log file which has the date as MM/DD/YY in the 2nd column, and HH:MM:SS in the 3rd column.
I need to change the date format to YYYY-MM-DD and merge it with the the time HH:MM:SS. How will I got about this?
Sample input
02/27/09,23:52:31
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I have a list of dates in the following format: mm/dd/yyyy and want to change these to the MySQL standard format: yyyy-mm-dd.
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
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For eg.
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The output must look like
1/1/09
2/2/09
.
.
.
31/1/09
.
.
1/2/09
.
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I have string like "1-JUN-11"
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Experts
I'm struggling with the dates in bash scripting.
here is my code
due1=`grep "$member" Due.txt | tail -n 1 | cut -d "," -f2 | tr -d "\15"`
duedate1=`date +%Y-%m-%$due1`
echo $due1
echo $duedate1
if I execute the above code
I get output as
10
2013-09 %10
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Hi Unix Gurus,
I would like to rename several files in a Unix Directory . The filenames can have more than 1 underscore ( _ ) and the last underscore is always followed by a date in the format mmddyyyy. The Extension of the files can be .txt or .pdf or .xls etc and is case insensitive ie... (1 Reply)
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a script below and wanted to change the output into three different file format (3 separate script)
#!bin/bash
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#postwrf_d01_YYYYMMDD_ZZZZ_f0HHHH.grb2
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10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
I'm trying to change date format using this script from day/month/year to month/day/year
#!/bin/bash
while read line; do
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
io::dirent
Dirent(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Dirent(3pm)
NAME
IO::Dirent - Access to dirent structs returned by readdir
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Dirent;
## slurp-style
opendir DIR, "/usr/local/foo";
my @entries = readdirent(DIR);
closedir DIR;
print $entries[0]->{name}, "
";
print $entries[0]->{type}, "
";
print $entries[0]->{inode}, "
";
## using the enumerator
opendir DIR, "/etc";
while( my $entry = nextdirent(DIR) ) {
print $entry->{name} . "
";
}
closedir DIR;
DESCRIPTION
readdirent returns a list of hashrefs. Each hashref contains the name of the directory entry, its inode for the filesystem it resides on
and its type (if available). If the file type or inode are not available, it won't be there!
nextdirent returns the next dirent as a hashref, allowing you to iterate over directory entries one by one. This may be helpful in low-
memory situations or where you have enormous directories.
IO::Dirent exports the following symbols by default:
readdirent
nextdirent
The following tags may be exported to your namespace:
ALL
which includes readdirent, nextdirent and the following symbols:
DT_UNKNOWN
DT_FIFO
DT_CHR
DT_DIR
DT_BLK
DT_REG
DT_LNK
DT_SOCK
DT_WHT
These symbols can be used to test the file type returned by readdirent in the following manner:
for my $entry ( readdirent(DIR) ) {
next unless $entry->{'type'} == DT_LNK;
print $entry->{'name'} . " is a symbolic link.
";
}
For platforms that do not implement file type in its dirent struct, readdirent will return a hashref with a single key/value of 'name' and
the filename (effectively the same as readdir). This is subject to change, if I can implement some of the to do items below.
CAVEATS
This was written on FreeBSD and OS X which implement a robust (but somewhat non-standard) dirent struct and which includes a file type
entry. I have plans to make this module more portable and useful by doing a stat on each directory entry to find the file type and inode
number when the dirent.h does not implement it otherwise.
Improvements and additional ports are welcome.
TO DO
o For platforms that do not implement a dirent struct with file type, do a stat on the entry and populate the structure anyway.
o Do some memory profiling (I'm not sure if I have any leaks or not).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2002, 2011 Scott Wiersdorf.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Perl Artistic License.
AUTHOR
Scott Wiersdorf, <scott@perlcode.org>
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Nick Ing-Simmons for his help on the perl-xs mailing list.
SEE ALSO
dirent(5), perlxstut, perlxs, perlguts, perlapi
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2007 by Scott Wiersdorf
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.1 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.14.2 2011-08-22 Dirent(3pm)