Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: How Do We Interpret This ?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How Do We Interpret This ? Post 302143307 by dummy_needhelp on Wednesday 31st of October 2007 02:07:15 PM
Old 10-31-2007
Thank you . I think you are right..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Please interpret.

Hi guys, I have no idea on unix but suddenly, my cobol programs calls a unix script that i know nothing about. can you guys interpret these lines for me? i know its a print command but I want to actually know how many copies it prints. qprt -da -P $1 -t '6' -i '6' -l '70' $2 qprt -da... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: supacow
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Interpret the sed command.

Could you interpret the following sed and awk command for me? command: cat tempfile2 |sed "s/\(BUILD-3-.*-\.-\)\(.*\..*\..*\)/\2/" | awk '{printf "%-8.8s %-23.23s %-30.30s %-50.50s\n", $1,$2,$3,substr($0,index($0,$4))}' > outfile2 2>/dev/null input:(data in tempfile2)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vj8436
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to interpret TOP

Hi, So I am new to Unix, and I need to check the performance of some apps I am running. But I don't know how to interpret the output from TOP. Could somebody please explain the difference between the different values. And also explain how I can have a process which has a %CPU > 100? ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: dj_jay_smith
7 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Interpret a text file

hi I have a text file abc.txt as below a = 0 b = 1 c = 3 i want to interpret this file i.e. if number corresponding to 'a' is 0 i want to run a script script.bash . How do do that? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: shishirkotkar
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Can someone interpret this -- not sure

Was wondering if someone could interpret this for me -- I'm not sure what everything means. It's a shell script from my bash book: cd () { builtin cd "$@" es=$? echo "$OLDPWD ->$PWD" return $es } what I don't quite understand is the "$@". I think, if I understand... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Straitsfan
6 Replies

6. High Performance Computing

How to interpret Papi output

I have collected data of Number of L2 cache misses using PAPI. I had run an MPI application with 4 threads (mpirun -np 4) and each thread reads the cache misses in L2. Each thread outputs data for every timestamp. eg: Timestamp data xxx530 thread# 0 2136 xxx531 thread# 0 ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: vishwamitra
0 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How does Awk interpret $0!~

I know $0 is the entire file's contents (at least I think that is what it is!), but what exactly is: $0!~ This was a snippet from a larger line awk '$0!~/^$/ {print $0}' This deletes blank lines, but I want to know specifically the $0!~ part... I am guessing /^$/ is regex for blank line...... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: glev2005
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

don't know how to interpret this

Can anyone tell me how to interpret this: listpage="ls |more" (the spaces are there in the example) $listpage It's from my bash book and I'm not sure what it means (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Straitsfan
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need to interpret code

hi All, i have never used sed in Unix environment, but i have one script which is using this following command: cat audit_session_rpt_MSP_20140331.lst|sed -n '/Apr 14/!p'| sed -n '/Page/!p'| sed -n '/UserName/!p' |\ egrep -v '^-|^=|^\*'|sed '/^$/d'|sed -e '1,7d'... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lovelysethii
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Who -r interpret?

I booted into single user mode with /usr/sbin/reboot -- -s but after doing a control -d my who -r shows run-level 3 Nov 17 14:07 3 0 S I was expecting it to show run-level S why is this still in run level 3? thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: goya
1 Replies
let(1)								   User Commands							    let(1)

NAME
let - shell built-in function to evaluate one or more arithmetic expressions SYNOPSIS
ksh let arg... ksh93 let [expr...] DESCRIPTION
ksh Each arg is a separate arithmetic expression to be evaluated. ksh93 let evaluates each expr in the current shell environment as an arithmetic expression using ANSI C syntax. Variables names are shell vari- ables and they are recursively evaluated as arithmetic expressions to get numerical values. let has been made obsolete by the ((...)) syn- tax of ksh93(1) which does not require quoting of the operators to pass them as command arguments. EXIT STATUS
ksh ksh returns the following exit values: 0 The value of the last expression is non-zero. 1 The value of the last expression is zero. ksh93 ksh93 returns the following exit values: 0 The last expr evaluates to a non-zero value. >0 The last expr evaluates to 0 or an error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
ksh(1), ksh93(1), set(1), typeset(1), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 2 Nov 2007 let(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:33 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy