Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting counter in a variable - can it be done? Post 302131246 by hegemaro on Thursday 9th of August 2007 09:21:11 PM
Old 08-09-2007
In Korn shell -- a personal favorite -- there are two ways of doing it both of which you have considered (I've changed the numbers a bit to make it clearer:

1 ) As an array

Code:
#!/bin/ksh

set -A e 123 456
set -A n 234 567

I=0

while [ $I -lt ${#e[*]} ]
do
    echo "coordinate=${e[$I]}, ${n[$I]}"
    (( I += 1 ))
done
exit


coordinate=123, 234
coordinate=456, 567


or using individual variables:

Code:
#/bin/ksh

e1=123; n1=234
e2=456; n2=567

for I in 1 2
do
    eval echo "coordinate=\$e$I, \$n$I"
done
exit

coordinate=123, 234
coordinate=456, 567
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Loop counter variable display

Hello everyone, how can I send output to the screen from a running script or tcl, in such a way that if a loop is executing I will see the rolling counter on my screen as the records are processed in the loop. I do not want the screen to scroll, though. In other words can a var's value be painted... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lifespan
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Counter Script..help please

I have generated a script that will email a list of people if a certain PID is not running, using "mailx". I have the script running every 5 minutes as a cron job. I want the script to stop sending an email, if the email has been sent 5 times (meaning PID is dead). I want this so that my... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sunguy222
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

counter

Hi, I need some help. Shell script counter. i need to add condition to check if counter is more than 10 and longer than 3 hours? it runs every 5 mins. it only check count and send email right now. it runs in cron as below gregcount.ksh gregdb 10 > /tmp/gregcount.out 2> /tmp/gregcount.err ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pega
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

adding counter to a variable while moving in a loop

The scenario is like this : I need to read records from a file one by one and increment counter1, if a certain field matches with a number say "40"..the script should increment the counter2 and also extract a corresponding field from the same line and adding them one by one and redirecting the the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mady135
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

DelimiterCount: how to use a counter

Hi, I am new to shell script. I want to count to Delimiter count for my source file. For that I have written script. When I tried to execute the script I could not able to view the results. It throws errors. I don't know what the problem is. My aim is I want to store the delimiter count in one... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh01_apk
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem with counter

i having a file xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx1234 ...........value can be change xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx1235 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx1236 . . . . xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx1300 ...........value can be change i want to cut last four characters of first line and last line and find the missing pattern. output should... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sagar_1986
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Counter

if ;then echo "mrnet greater 5000" gzip /var/log/mrnet.log mv /var/log/mrnet.log.gz /var/log/mrnet.log.1.gz if ];then i=1 let i++ mv /var/log/mrnet.log.1.gz /var/log/vieux-logs/mrnet.log.$i.gz else echo "theres no... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Froob
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help require with counter

I have this file 1801,A1,2012-12-16 15:59:59.995,id2_3,ab,phoneC2-00,VOE,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1802,A1,2012-12-16 15:59:59.995,id2_3,ab=,phoneX1-01,BL,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1803,A1,2012-12-16 15:59:59.995,id2_3,ab,phone300,BL,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1804,A1,2012-12-16... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikhil jain
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to take input from different files for using the counter variable?

Hi All, I have script which call test utility and it takes token input which is kept in a separate file. now instead of taking tokens from single file,will keep 5 input files and script should read tokens from each files. EX : There will 5 token.txt file which will have say around 1000... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Optimus81
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Pegging counter

Hi Experts, I am in need for some help. My competence level on unix is not at all helping me to resolve this. Please help. My Input for a system command is as under: Counters are getting pegged each hour. I need to have a difference printed rather than pegged counter values. Counter... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vanand420
2 Replies
Regexp::Common::number(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Regexp::Common::number(3)

NAME
Regexp::Common::number -- provide regexes for numbers SYNOPSIS
use Regexp::Common qw /number/; while (<>) { /^$RE{num}{int}$/ and print "Integer "; /^$RE{num}{real}$/ and print "Real "; /^$RE{num}{real}{-base => 16}$/ and print "Hexadecimal real "; } DESCRIPTION
Please consult the manual of Regexp::Common for a general description of the works of this interface. Do not use this module directly, but load it via Regexp::Common. $RE{num}{int}{-base}{-sep}{-group}{-places}{-sign} Returns a pattern that matches an integer. If "-base => B" is specified, the integer is in base B, with "2 <= B <= 36". For bases larger than 10, upper case letters are used. The default base is 10. If "-sep => P" is specified, the pattern P is required as a grouping marker within the number. If this option is not given, no grouping marker is used. If "-group => N" is specified, digits between grouping markers must be grouped in sequences of exactly N digits. The default value of N is 3. If "-group => N,M" is specified, digits between grouping markers must be grouped in sequences of at least N digits, and at most M digits. This option is ignored unless the "-sep" option is used. If "-places => N" is specified, the integer recognized must be exactly N digits wide. If "-places => N,M" is specified, the integer must be at least N wide, and at most M characters. There is no default, which means that integers are unlimited in size. This option is ignored if the "-sep" option is used. If "-sign => P" is used, it's a pattern the leading sign has to match. This defaults to "[-+]?", which means the number is optionally preceded by a minus or a plus. If you want to match unsigned integers, use $RE{num}{int}{-sign => ''}. For example: $RE{num}{int} # match 1234567 $RE{num}{int}{-sep=>','} # match 1,234,567 $RE{num}{int}{-sep=>',?'} # match 1234567 or 1,234,567 $RE{num}{int}{-sep=>'.'}{-group=>4} # match 1.2345.6789 Under "-keep" (see Regexp::Common): $1 captures the entire number $2 captures the optional sign of the number $3 captures the complete set of digits $RE{num}{real}{-base}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group}{-expon} Returns a pattern that matches a floating-point number. If "-base=N" is specified, the number is assumed to be in that base (with A..Z representing the digits for 11..36). By default, the base is 10. If "-radix=P" is specified, the pattern P is used as the radix point for the number (i.e. the "decimal point" in base 10). The default is "qr/[.]/". If "-places=N" is specified, the number is assumed to have exactly N places after the radix point. If "-places=M,N" is specified, the number is assumed to have between M and N places after the radix point. By default, the number of places is unrestricted. If "-sep=P" specified, the pattern P is required as a grouping marker within the pre-radix section of the number. By default, no separator is allowed. If "-group=N" is specified, digits between grouping separators must be grouped in sequences of exactly N characters. The default value of N is 3. If "-expon=P" is specified, the pattern P is used as the exponential marker. The default value of P is "qr/[Ee]/". If "-sign=P" is specified, the pattern P is used to match the leading sign (and the sign of the exponent). This defaults to "[-+]?", means means that an optional plus or minus sign can be used. For example: $RE{num}{real} # matches 123.456 or -0.1234567 $RE{num}{real}{-places=>2} # matches 123.45 or -0.12 $RE{num}{real}{-places=>'0,3'} # matches 123.456 or 0 or 9.8 $RE{num}{real}{-sep=>'[,.]?'} # matches 123,456 or 123.456 $RE{num}{real}{-base=>3'} # matches 121.102 Under "-keep": $1 captures the entire match $2 captures the optional sign of the number $3 captures the complete mantissa $4 captures the whole number portion of the mantissa $5 captures the radix point $6 captures the fractional portion of the mantissa $7 captures the optional exponent marker $8 captures the entire exponent value $9 captures the optional sign of the exponent $10 captures the digits of the exponent $RE{num}{dec}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group}{-expon} A synonym for $RE{num}{real}{-base=>10}{...} $RE{num}{oct}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group}{-expon} A synonym for $RE{num}{real}{-base=>8}{...} $RE{num}{bin}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group}{-expon} A synonym for $RE{num}{real}{-base=>2}{...} $RE{num}{hex}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group}{-expon} A synonym for $RE{num}{real}{-base=>16}{...} $RE{num}{decimal}{-base}{-radix}{-places}{-sep}{-group} The same as $RE{num}{real}, except that an exponent isn't allowed. Hence, this returns a pattern matching decimal numbers. If "-base=N" is specified, the number is assumed to be in that base (with A..Z representing the digits for 11..36). By default, the base is 10. If "-radix=P" is specified, the pattern P is used as the radix point for the number (i.e. the "decimal point" in base 10). The default is "qr/[.]/". If "-places=N" is specified, the number is assumed to have exactly N places after the radix point. If "-places=M,N" is specified, the number is assumed to have between M and N places after the radix point. By default, the number of places is unrestricted. If "-sep=P" specified, the pattern P is required as a grouping marker within the pre-radix section of the number. By default, no separator is allowed. If "-group=N" is specified, digits between grouping separators must be grouped in sequences of exactly N characters. The default value of N is 3. For example: $RE{num}{decimal} # matches 123.456 or -0.1234567 $RE{num}{decimal}{-places=>2} # matches 123.45 or -0.12 $RE{num}{decimal}{-places=>'0,3'} # matches 123.456 or 0 or 9.8 $RE{num}{decimal}{-sep=>'[,.]?'} # matches 123,456 or 123.456 $RE{num}{decimal}{-base=>3'} # matches 121.102 Under "-keep": $1 captures the entire match $2 captures the optional sign of the number $3 captures the complete mantissa $4 captures the whole number portion of the mantissa $5 captures the radix point $6 captures the fractional portion of the mantissa $RE{num}{square} Returns a pattern that matches a (decimal) square. Because Perl's arithmetic is lossy when using integers over about 53 bits, this pattern only recognizes numbers less than 9000000000000000, if one uses a Perl that is configured to use 64 bit integers. Otherwise, the limit is 2147483647. These restrictions were introduced in versions 2.116 and 2.117 of Regexp::Common. Regardless whether "-keep" was set, the matched number will be returned in $1. This pattern is available for version 5.008 and up. $RE{num}{roman} Returns a pattern that matches an integer written in Roman numbers. Case doesn't matter. Only the more modern style, that is, no more than three repetitions of a letter, is recognized. The largest number matched is MMMCMXCIX, or 3999. Larger numbers cannot be expressed using ASCII characters. A future version will be able to deal with the Unicode symbols to match larger Roman numbers. Under "-keep", the number will be captured in $1. SEE ALSO
Regexp::Common for a general description of how to use this interface. AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) MAINTAINANCE
This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.be). BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Bound to be plenty. For a start, there are many common regexes missing. Send them in to regexp-common@abigail.be. LICENSE and COPYRIGHT This software is Copyright (c) 2001 - 2013, Damian Conway and Abigail. This module is free software, and maybe used under any of the following licenses: 1) The Perl Artistic License. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL. 2) The Perl Artistic License 2.0. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL2. 3) The BSD Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.BSD. 4) The MIT Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.MIT. perl v5.18.2 2013-03-11 Regexp::Common::number(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:41 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy