Want Urgent career Advice


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums Cybersecurity Want Urgent career Advice
# 1  
Old 07-22-2006
Want Urgent career Advice

Dear All,
I have finished my MS in chemical engineering from US university and presetly on OPT work permit.
I do not have software background.
I have received call from consultant company.
They are offering me AIX UNIX training for four weeks and find me a job.
My question is how difficuilt that will be for me,since I will be starting from scratch..I just know how to take printout and send email from unix terminal..thats it.
Will it be good choice to take step in IT field..
Please advice.
Desi students/professionals you might understand my situation better..
looking forward to hear



Duplicate thread closed

Last edited by reborg; 07-22-2006 at 07:22 PM..
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. What is on Your Mind?

Career Advice

Hi, I not sure if this is the right place to ask this question and if I'm wrong I apologize. I'm a systems administrator and have about 5 years of experience. I have worked on Solaris HP-UX *linux Visualization ( VMWare ) And I'm comfortable with shell and Perl. Of late,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: maverick_here
0 Replies

2. AIX

Career Advice Asked

Dear All i am working on windows plattform and i am interested in Aix so i have done IBM Aix certification, can you please suggest Aix filed is good for my carrier,currently i am working as Desktop admin edit by bakunin: please understand that the question you raised has nothing to do with the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manzur13
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Career advice for experienced shell script coder, need help.

I have four years of shell scripting experience in AIX and HP-UX and have worked in perl scripts as well, the good part is i love scripting and so far i have been getting job offers as well. The bad part is , shell scripting is all i know , so the kind of jobs i am getting is mostly production... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: harishrao
2 Replies

4. AIX

Need career advice please

Hi all, I'm a Solaris/linux sysadmin with a good general UNIX skills and with a little tiny background on AIX with no exposure to IBM's hardware ( just reading ) , but i think i can cope with it . UNIX jobs nowadays are rare here ( i mean hp-ux , solaris , aix ) not linux specially after the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: h@foorsa.biz
6 Replies

5. Solaris

Career advice: Solaris & SUN support

I'm looking for career advice here. I've been working as a support engineer for Sun partners for 2 years now, and I worked with a lot of servers, tape libraries, and SAN storage. I have also done a lot of server installations and gone to a lot of trainings. Now, I'm offered to do Solaris... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sun Fire
13 Replies

6. What is on Your Mind?

career Advice

Hi all, I need a career Advice. About myself -- I have 2 years of work experience as a System Administrator (Linux and Solaris). I am Sun Certified System Administrator on Solaris 10.0 currently working in a MNC. As for career growth, I am doing 3 year MBA course from distance learning,... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikas027
4 Replies

7. What is on Your Mind?

Advice on pursuing a career

Hello, I am currently a second year university student studying amongst other subjects Unix. I am interested in pursuing Unix into a future career, specifically as a network administrator. I was wondering if you can provide information on how to pursue a career in Unix, i.e. what general paths... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: -CurrentStudent
17 Replies

8. What is on Your Mind?

Career advice

I am a junior unix sys admin (Tru64) I have been in this job for 9 months and I am quite worried. When I first got the job I was delighted as I was finally in a job where I could have the chance to be a specialist in a field rather than being a general support guy (i graduated from uni and got... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: supadid
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Career advice

I am new to scripting and I need some direction on which language to learn. Can you please advice and which skill is very marketable career wise.Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: etcman
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Want URGENT Advice:Career as UNIX Systme Administrator

Dear All, I have finished my MS in chemical engineering from US university and presetly on OPT work permit. I do not have software background. I have received call from consultant company. They are offering me AIX UNIX training for four weeks and find me a job. My question is how difficuilt... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: saarth_desh
5 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
Elements(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     Elements(3pm)

NAME
Chemistry::Elements - Perl extension for working with Chemical Elements SYNOPSIS
use Chemistry::Elements qw(get_name get_Z get_symbol); # the constructor can use different input $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $atomic_number ); $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $chemical_symbol ); $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $element_name ); # you can make up your own attributes by specifying # a method (which is really AUTOLOAD) $element->molar_mass(22.989) #sets the attribute $MM = $element->molar_mass #retrieves the value DESCRIPTION
There are two parts to the module: the object stuff and the exportable functions for use outside of the object stuff. The exportable functions are discussed in EXPORTABLE FUNCTIONS. Chemistry::Elements provides an easy, object-oriented way to keep track of your chemical data. Using either the atomic number, chemical symbol, or element name you can construct an Element object. Once you have an element object, you can associate your data with the object by making up your own methods, which the AUTOLOAD function handles. Since each chemist is likely to want to use his or her own data, or data for some unforesee-able property, this module does not try to be a repository for chemical data. The Element object constructor tries to be as flexible as possible - pass it an atomic number, chemical symbol, or element name and it tries to create the object. # the constructor can use different input $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $atomic_number ); $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $chemical_symbol ); $element = Chemistry::Elements->new( $element_name ); once you have the object, you can define your own methods simply by using them. Giving the method an argument (others will be ignored) creates an attribute with the method's name and the argument's value. # you can make up your own attributes by specifying # a method (which is really AUTOLOAD) $element->molar_mass(22.989) #sets the attribute $MM = $element->molar_mass #retrieves the value The atomic number, chemical symbol, and element name can be retrieved in the same way. $atomic_number = $element->Z; $name = $element->name; $symbol = $element->symbol; These methods can also be used to set values, although changing any of the three affects the other two. $element = Chemistry::Elements->new('Lead'); $atomic_number = $element->Z; # $atomic_number is 82 $element->Z(79); $name = $element->name; # $name is 'Gold' Instance methods new( Z | SYMBOL | NAME ) Create a new instance from either the atomic number, symbol, or element name. can( METHOD [, METHOD ... ] ) Returns true if the package or object can respond to METHOD. This distinguishes between class and instance methods. Z Return the atomic number of the element. name Return the name of the element. symbol Return the symbol of the element. Exportable functions These functions can be exported. They are not exported by default. At the moment, only the functional interface supports multi-language names. get_symbol( NAME|Z ) This function attempts to return the symbol of the chemical element given either the chemical symbol, element name, or atmoic number. The function does its best to interpret inconsistent input data (e.g. chemcial symbols of mixed and single case). use Chemistry::Elements qw(get_symbol); $name = get_symbol('Fe'); #$name is 'Fe' $name = get_symbol('fe'); #$name is 'Fe' $name = get_symbol(26); #$name is 'Fe' $name = get_symbol('Iron'); #$name is 'Fe' $name = get_symbol('iron'); #$name is 'Fe' If no symbol can be found, nothing is returned. Since this function will return the symbol if it is given a symbol, you can use it to test whether a string is a chemical symbol (although you have to play some tricks with case since get_symbol will try its best despite the case of the input data). if( lc($string) eq lc( get_symbol($string) ) ) { #stuff } You can modify the symbols (e.g. you work for UCal ;) ) by changing the data at the end of this module. get_name( SYMBOL|NAME|Z [, LANGUAGE] ) This function attempts to return the name the chemical element given either the chemical symbol, element name, or atomic number. The function does its best to interpret inconsistent input data (e.g. chemcial symbols of mixed and single case). $name = get_name('Fe'); #$name is 'Iron' $name = get_name('fe'); #$name is 'Iron' $name = get_name(26); #$name is 'Iron' $name = get_name('Iron'); #$name is 'Iron' $name = get_name('iron'); #$name is 'Iron' If there is no Z can be found, nothing is returned. Since this function will return the name if it is given a name, you can use it to test whether a string is a chemical element name (although you have to play some tricks with case since get_name will try its best despite the case of the input data). if( lc($string) eq lc( get_name($string) ) ) { #stuff } You can modify the names (e.g. for different languages) by changing the data at the end of this module. get_Z( SYMBOL|NAME|Z ) This function attempts to return the atomic number of the chemical element given either the chemical symbol, element name, or atomic number. The function does its best to interpret inconsistent input data (e.g. chemcial symbols of mixed and single case). $name = get_Z('Fe'); #$name is 26 $name = get_Z('fe'); #$name is 26 $name = get_Z(26); #$name is 26 $name = get_Z('Iron'); #$name is 26 $name = get_Z('iron'); #$name is 26 If there is no Z can be found, nothing is returned. Since this function will return the Z if it is given a Z, you can use it to test whether a string is an atomic number. You might want to use the string comparison in case the $string is not a number (in which case the comparison will be false save for the case when $string is undefined). if( $string eq get_Z($string) ) { #stuff } The package constructor automatically finds the largest defined atomic number (in case you add your own heavy elements). AUTOLOADing methods You can pseudo-define additional methods to associate data with objects. For instance, if you wanted to add a molar mass attribute, you simply pretend that there is a molar_mass method: $element->molar_mass($MM); #add molar mass datum in $MM to object Similiarly, you can retrieve previously set values by not specifying an argument to your pretend method: $datum = $element->molar_mass(); #or without the parentheses $datum = $element->molar_mass; If a value has not been associated with the pretend method and the object, the pretend method returns nothing. I had thought about providing basic data for the elements, but thought that anyone using this module would probably have their own data. If there is an interest in canned data, perhaps I can provide mine :) Localization support XXX: Fill this stuff in later. For now see the test suite TO DO
I would like make this module easily localizable so that one could specify other names or symbols for the elements (i.e. a different language or a different perspective on the heavy elements). If anyone should make changes to the data, i would like to get a copy so that i can include it in future releases :) SOURCE AVAILABILITY
The source for this module is in Github: git://github.com/briandfoy/chemistry--elements.git AUTHOR
brian d foy, "<bdfoy@cpan.org>" COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2000-2008 brian d foy. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.0 2009-08-10 Elements(3pm)