Hello,
In my shell program, I need to test for a specific size of a text file before it can be imported into an oracle table.
If the size is less than that number, my program should stop processing. What is the correct command to do this test?
Thanks! (1 Reply)
I've been working on getting a script to take size, dir name and file name variables from an input file and creating the same dir structure along with the file of specific size.
An example of the input file:
size/dirname/filename
2100/JAN_06/12345ABC.TCC
2354/FEB_06/24564XYZ.NOS... (2 Replies)
As I'm a newbie to UNIX, very newbie in fact, could anyone humour me and tell me how I'd find just the file size in bytes for a specific file?
Or at least just the specific line from the ls -a for the file - call it file1
I know this sounds bad but I don't seem to be getting very far at this... (3 Replies)
hi all,
in my server there are some specific application files which are spread through out the server... these are spread in folders..sub-folders..chid folders...
please help me, how can i find the total size of these specific files in the server... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I am very new in programming.
Can anyone please help me in the matter below?
I have one raw file like:
gi|77|ref|NC_002971.3| Coxiella burnetii RSA 493, complete genome 6371 ATCGTGGTTGTGGTTCAT 5032 P 2 12
gi|71|ref|NC_005773.3| Pseudomonas syringae pv.... (4 Replies)
Hello dear unix command line friends !
I'm looking for a simple combinaison of ls & awk (maybe grep) to print:
list of folders of a directory
|_ ordered by size
like what I have with
$ du -sk ./* | sort -rn
printing that result:
8651520 ./New Virtual Machine_1
8389120 ./Redhat
... (1 Reply)
Hello world,
I just learnt we can create a directory with custom size in a Linux server (say Redhat). Is it true? I'm asking because the only data (I can think of) a directory's inode holds is the files and 'sub-dir's. How can a new empty directory be of some required size? :wall:
PS : In... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
i have some files of specific pattern ...i need to look for files which are having size greater than zero and move those files to another directory..
Ex...
abc_0702,
abc_0709,
abc_782
abc_1234 ...etc
need to find out which is having the size >0 and move those to target directory..... (7 Replies)
There is away to make a window pane a specific size. I just forgot how to do it.
Something like this:
Ctrl-A : split-window -l xx -h xx
Anyone know the right way to do this?
Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ignatius
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
term::size::any
Term::Size::Any(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Term::Size::Any(3pm)NAME
Term::Size::Any - Retrieve terminal size
SYNOPSIS
# the traditional way
use Term::Size::Any qw( chars pixels );
($columns, $rows) = chars *STDOUT{IO};
($x, $y) = pixels;
DESCRIPTION
This is a unified interface to retrieve terminal size. It loads one module of a list of known alternatives, each implementing some way to
get the desired terminal information. This loaded module will actually do the job on behalf of "Term::Size::Any".
Thus, "Term::Size::Any" depends on the availability of one of these modules:
Term::Size (soon to be supported)
Term::Size::Perl
Term::Size::ReadKey (soon to be supported)
Term::Size::Win32
This release fallbacks to Term::Size::Win32 if running in Windows 32 systems. For other platforms, it uses the first of Term::Size::Perl,
Term::Size or Term::Size::ReadKey which loads successfully. (To be honest, I disabled the fallback to Term::Size and Term::Size::ReadKey
which are buggy by now.)
FUNCTIONS
The traditional interface is by importing functions "chars" and "pixels" into the caller's space.
chars
($columns, $rows) = chars($h);
$columns = chars($h);
"chars" returns the terminal size in units of characters corresponding to the given filehandle $h. If the argument is omitted,
*STDIN{IO} is used. In scalar context, it returns the terminal width.
pixels
($x, $y) = pixels($h);
$x = pixels($h);
"pixels" returns the terminal size in units of pixels corresponding to the given filehandle $h. If the argument is omitted, *STDIN{IO}
is used. In scalar context, it returns the terminal width.
Many systems with character-only terminals will return "(0, 0)".
SEE ALSO
It all began with Term::Size by Tim Goodwin. You may want to have a look at:
Term::Size
Term::Size::Perl
Term::Size::Win32
Term::Size::ReadKey
BUGS
Please reports bugs via CPAN RT, via web http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Term-Size-Any or e-mail to bug-Term-Size-Any@rt.cpan.org.
AUTHOR
Adriano R. Ferreira, <ferreira@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2008 by Adriano R. Ferreira
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-01-21 Term::Size::Any(3pm)