I am going to develop a address book using the shell scripting commands without sed, awk, .... I am thinking to apply the concept of 2 dimenstional array. Can I create a two dimensional array for the insertion/updation/deletion of record in unix. If yes then tell me plz or recommend me some material. If any other solution then also tell me.
Most shells do not have arrays, and those that do, have only one-dimensional arrays.
I am trying to reference a two dimensional array in a
subroutine and can't seem to figure this one out in Perl.
Does anybody know? Please enlighten me.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use constant DIM => 4;
sub Shift_elements_right{
my (@Input, @Output) = @_;
for ($i = 0 ; $i <= DIM ;... (5 Replies)
I am trying to implementing two dimensinal array in ksh script.Would you pls help me out.
I have a large size of file, File contains looks like
ID SID VLAUE1 VALUE2 TOTALVALUE
1 a1 01 02 03
1 b1 02 05 07 ... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm writing a nagios check that will see if our ldap servers are in sync...
I got the status data into a nested array, I would like to search key of each array and if "OK" is NOT present, echo other key=>values in the current array to a variable
so...eg...let take the single array... (1 Reply)
I am writing matrix multiplication and trying to return a two dimensional array from a function but I keep getting errors. Can someone please help me?
here is my code (it is just the skeleton of my program):
void main ()
{
...
int *matmultiply (int, int, int, int , int , int )
...
}
... (4 Replies)
hi,
total newbie to shell scripting and wondering if some of you guru's can give me a hand on a problem I'm trying to solve.
The tmplsnr.a file contains
LSNR_51526
db1
db2
LSNR_51527
db3
db4
db5
Summary - depending on which db is set, the script will start the relevant listener... (5 Replies)
Hey guyz.
Here is my sample input file following by first part of my code:
* A B C D E
reg1 1 0 1 1 0
reg2 0 1 0 0 1
reg3 1 0 0 1 0
reg4 0 0 1 0 1
reg5 1 1 0 0 1
use strict;
use warnings;
open (IN, "test_input.txt") or die ("Can't open file.txt: $!\n");
my $line = <IN>; ... (2 Replies)
Hello, all
For a 1-dimensional array, such as
myarr_1=1
myarr_1=2
myarr_1=3I know I can write a loop as below to show the array member one by one:
for (i in myarr_1){print i, myarr_1}Now, suppose I have a two dimensional array such as:
myarray_2=1 myarray_2=2
myarray_2=10 myarray_2=20My... (3 Replies)
I have an array of names. Each one of the name, has a number represented to it.
For example A has an ID 8, B has an ID 2.
What I am after is a for loop that when the array is in position 1, a particular variable is set to the value of position 1 in array 2
declare -a arr=("A" "B" "C"... (6 Replies)
Hi, I'm developing a script which contains a multi dimensional array, however for some reason the array is not iterating.
When executing the script, services are listed as arguments from argument 2. Ex voice data sms.
service=${@:2};
for services in $service
do
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nms
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
eval
eval(n) Tcl Built-In Commands eval(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
eval - Evaluate a Tcl script
SYNOPSIS
eval arg ?arg ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Eval takes one or more arguments, which together comprise a Tcl script containing one or more commands. Eval concatenates all its argu-
ments in the same fashion as the concat command, passes the concatenated string to the Tcl interpreter recursively, and returns the result
of that evaluation (or any error generated by it). Note that the list command quotes sequences of words in such a way that they are not
further expanded by the eval command.
EXAMPLES
Often, it is useful to store a fragment of a script in a variable and execute it later on with extra values appended. This technique is
used in a number of places throughout the Tcl core (e.g. in fcopy, lsort and trace command callbacks). This example shows how to do this
using core Tcl commands:
set script {
puts "logging now"
lappend $myCurrentLogVar
}
set myCurrentLogVar log1
# Set up a switch of logging variable part way through!
after 20000 set myCurrentLogVar log2
for {set i 0} {$i<10} {incr i} {
# Introduce a random delay
after [expr {int(5000 * rand())}]
update ;# Check for the asynch log switch
eval $script $i [clock clicks]
}
Note that in the most common case (where the script fragment is actually just a list of words forming a command prefix), it is better to |
use {*}$script when doing this sort of invocation pattern. It is less general than the eval command, and hence easier to make robust in |
practice. The following procedure acts in a way that is analogous to the lappend command, except it inserts the argument values at the
start of the list in the variable:
proc lprepend {varName args} {
upvar 1 $varName var
# Ensure that the variable exists and contains a list
lappend var
# Now we insert all the arguments in one go
set var [eval [list linsert $var 0] $args]
}
However, the last line would now normally be written without eval, like this: |
set var [linsert $var 0 {*}$args] |
SEE ALSO
catch(n), concat(n), error(n), interp(n), list(n), namespace(n), subst(n), tclvars(n), uplevel(n)
KEYWORDS
concatenate, evaluate, script
Tcl eval(n)