Hi,
I am new to shell scripting, Can any body suggest me how I can split a string with a delimiter as whitespace into words and store into a array.
I have read a line from file, now I want to split the line into words and store in a array for further use.
eg : the sky is blue
want... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to split a string in awk and treat each component seperatley.
I know i can use:
split ("hi all", a, " ")
to put each delimited component into array a.
However when i want to do this with just a string of chars it does not work
split ("hi", a, "");
print a;
prints... (6 Replies)
Hello,
I am recently working on an application that sends large strings accross a network very often. These then need to be broken up first with '!' and then with ','. My current function (below) works fine for this when not too much data is being sent across the network but segfaults when a... (4 Replies)
Let's say I have a very long string with no spaces but just words stored in $very_long_string.
$very_long_string = "aaaaaaaaaaabbbbbbbbbbbccccccccccccdddddddddddd";
I can do this to split the string into 1 character each and store them in an array:
@myArray = split(//, $very_long_string); ... (3 Replies)
Hello all!
I'm trying to put together a small script that will take in a file name and attach a datestamp to the end of it (but before the file type extension).
To illustrate...
Before:
filename.txt
anotherfilename.txt
After:
filename_20090724.txt
anotherfilename_20090724.txt
... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have a string like this in a file,
I want to retrive the words separated by comma's in 3 variables. like
How do i get that.plz advice (2 Replies)
Hello I need help with the following. I have strings like
#if defined(__def1__)
#if defined(__def1__) || defined(__def2__)
#if defined(__def1__) && defined(__def2__) && defined(__def3__).
#if defined(__def1__) || defined(__def2__) || defined(__def3__).
I need to print what is there in... (4 Replies)
Input:
Debris Linux is a minimalist, desktop-oriented distribution and live CD based on Ubuntu.
It includes the GNOME desktop and a small set of popular desktop applications, such
as GNOME Office, Firefox web browser, Pidgin instant messenger, and ufw firewall manager.
Debris Linux ships... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a requirement that has 50-60 million records that we need to split a delimited string (Delimeter is newline) into rows.
Source Date:
SerialID UnidID GENRE
100 A11 AAAchar(10)BBB
200 B11 CCCchar(10)DDD(10)ZZZZ
Field 'GENRE' is a string with new line as delimeter and not sure... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: techmoris
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
split
split(n) Tcl Built-In Commands split(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
split - Split a string into a proper Tcl list
SYNOPSIS
split string ?splitChars?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Returns a list created by splitting string at each character that is in the splitChars argument. Each element of the result list will con-
sist of the characters from string that lie between instances of the characters in splitChars. Empty list elements will be generated if
string contains adjacent characters in splitChars, or if the first or last character of string is in splitChars. If splitChars is an empty
string then each character of string becomes a separate element of the result list. SplitChars defaults to the standard white-space char-
acters.
EXAMPLES
Divide up a USENET group name into its hierarchical components:
split "comp.lang.tcl.announce" .
-> comp lang tcl announce
See how the split command splits on every character in splitChars, which can result in information loss if you are not careful:
split "alpha beta gamma" "temp"
-> al {ha b} {} {a ga} {} a
Extract the list words from a string that is not a well-formed list:
split "Example with {unbalanced brace character"
-> Example with {unbalanced brace character
Split a string into its constituent characters
split "Hello world" {}
-> H e l l o { } w o r l d
PARSING RECORD-ORIENTED FILES
Parse a Unix /etc/passwd file, which consists of one entry per line, with each line consisting of a colon-separated list of fields:
## Read the file
set fid [open /etc/passwd]
set content [read $fid]
close $fid
## Split into records on newlines
set records [split $content "
"]
## Iterate over the records
foreach rec $records {
## Split into fields on colons
set fields [split $rec ":"]
## Assign fields to variables and print some out...
lassign $fields
userName password uid grp longName homeDir shell
puts "$longName uses [file tail $shell] for a login shell"
}
SEE ALSO
join(n), list(n), string(n)
KEYWORDS
list, split, string
Tcl split(n)