02-12-2002
Is there any difference between "tput rev" and "tput smso"?
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
when I do
$ ls z*
List of all files begining with 'z'. But what if I want to do a reverse lookup. Just for interest sake ;)
$ ls ztr
should be same as
$ ls ztr*
$ ls zt*
$ ls z* (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: azmathshaikh
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hi,
I have to reverse the command output like below:
output:
online
offline
disable
maintening
killed
How to reverse this output like:
killed
maintening
disable
offline
online
It should be ksh script. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: a2156z
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Just check out the script...
1 #!/bin/bash
2
3 echo -n "Enter a string :: "
4 read str
5 echo -n "Reverse is :: "
6 l=`expr length "$str"`
7 while
8 do
9 m=`echo $str | cut -c "$l"`
10 echo -n $m
11 ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lipun4u
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have a String str="Manish". I would like to reverse it.
I know the option to do this in bash is: echo "Manish" | rev
but I have seen an alternate solution somewhere, which states that:
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Discussion started by: manishdivs
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Hi all,
Just saw a "sed" format to reverse display the file contents, but am not geting its logic completely. I would appreciate if somebody can explain
sed '1!G;h;$!d' < filename
All I know in this is that :
G will add a new line after every line except first one... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dextergenious
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to reverse every even line in my file using the awk command below but it prints only the odd lines but nothing else:
$ awk '(NR % 2) {print}; !(NR % 2) {print | "rev";}' myfile
Any idea what I might have done wrong?
Thank you. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: ivpz
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I want to reverse some DNA sequences and complement them at the same time. Thus, A changes to T; C to G; T to A and G to C.
example:
infile
>GHL8OVD01CMQVT SHORT1
TTGATGT
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TTGATGT
outfile:
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ACATCAA
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ACATCAA
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Hi,
Apologies in advance - out of my scope here but would love your help.
I have the following command on destination system to copy data from one system to another:
rcmd "cd data; find . -print|cpio -ocB" | dd ibs=5k obs=5k|cpio -iducmvB
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
clear
TPUT(1) BSD General Commands Manual TPUT(1)
NAME
tput, clear -- terminal capability interface
SYNOPSIS
tput [-T term] attribute ...
clear
DESCRIPTION
The tput utility makes terminal-dependent information available to users or shell applications. When invoked as the clear utility, the
screen will be cleared as if
tput clear
had been executed. The options to tput are as follows:
-T The terminal name as specified in the termcap(5) database, for example, ``vt100'' or ``xterm''. If not specified, tput retrieves the
``TERM'' variable from the environment.
The tput utility outputs a string for each attribute that is of type string; a number for each of type integer. Otherwise, tput exits 0 if
the terminal has the capability and 1 if it does not, without further action.
If an attribute is of type string, and takes arguments (e.g. cursor movement, the termcap ``cm'' sequence) the arguments are taken from the
command line immediately following the attribute.
The following special attributes are available:
clear Clear the screen (the termcap(5) ``cl'' sequence).
init Initialize the terminal (the termcap(5) ``is'' sequence).
longname Print the descriptive name of the user's terminal type.
reset Reset the terminal (the termcap(5) ``rs'' sequence).
EXIT STATUS
The exit status of tput is as follows:
0 If the last attribute attribute argument is of type string or integer, its value was successfully written to standard output. If the
argument is of type boolean, the terminal has this attribute.
1 This terminal does not have the specified boolean attribute.
2 Usage error.
3 No information is available about the specified terminal type.
SEE ALSO
termcap(5), terminfo(5)
STANDARDS
The tput utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').
HISTORY
The tput utility appeared in 4.4BSD.
BUGS
The tput utility cannot really distinguish between different types of attributes.
Some termcap entries depend upon having a '%' in them that is just a '%' and nothing more. Right now we just warn about them if they do not
have a valid type declaration. These warnings are sent to stderr.
BSD
June 15, 2002 BSD