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Full Discussion: Need a Script!!!
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Need a Script!!! Post 302155958 by Smiling Dragon on Sunday 6th of January 2008 09:02:39 PM
Old 01-06-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by prince_ban
well which one is your shell,,is it Ksh or Bash so first line will determine this parameter as

#!/bin/bash or #!/bin/ksh {depends on ur platform}

#then simply you can use any style via

echo "enter a utilty you wanna use top (1) or bdf (2) & 3 for exit"
read option
case $option in
1) /usr/bin/top ;; #please give complete path
2) /usr/bin/bdf ;; #same for here too
3) exit 0 ;;

esac
You don't need bash or korn for that, and bourne works everywhere, #!/bin/sh
Also, add a while loop to get the full functionality the OP is after.
Smilie
 

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dc(1)							      General Commands Manual							     dc(1)

NAME
dc - Provides an interactive desk calculator for arbitrary precision integer arithmetic SYNOPSIS
dc DESCRIPTION
The dc command is an arbitrary precision arithmetic calculator. The dc command takes its input from file or standard input until it reads an End-of-File character. It writes to standard output. The dc command operates on integers by default, but you can specify an input base, output base, and a number of fractional digits to be maintained. The dc command is structured overall as a stacking, reverse Polish calcu- lator. The bc command is a preprocessor for dc. It provides infix notation and a syntax similar to the C language, which implements functions and reasonable control structures for programs. SUBCOMMANDS
Pushes the specified value onto the stack. number is an unbroken string of the digits 0 to 9. To specify a negative number, precede it with _ (underscore). A number can contain a decimal point. Adds (+), subtracts (-), multiplies (*), divides (/), remainders (%), or expo- nentiates (^) the top two values on the stack. The dc command pops the top two entries off the stack and pushes the result on the stack in their place. Interprets the rest of the line as a system command. Executes a line of input from standard input. Cleans the stack: dc pops all values on the stack. Duplicates the top value on the stack. Displays all values on the stack. Pops the top value on the stack and uses that value as the number radix for further input. Pushes the input base on the top of the stack. Pops the top of the stack, and uses that value as a nonnegative scale factor. The appropriate number of places is displayed on output and is maintained during multipli- cation, division, and exponentiation. The interaction of scale factor, input base, and output base is reasonable if all are changed together. Pushes the value in register x on the stack. The register x is not changed. All registers start with zero value. Treats x as a stack and pops its top value onto the main stack. Pops the top value on the stack and uses that value as the number radix for further output. Pushes the output base on the top of the stack. Prints the top value on the stack. The top value remains unchanged. Interprets the top value on the stack as an ASCII string, prints it, and removes it. Exits the program. If dc is executing a string, it pops the recursion level by two. Pops the top value on the stack and the string execution level by that value. Pops the top of the stack and stores it in a register named x, where x can be any single-byte character. Replaces the top element on the stack by its square root. Any existing fractional part of the argument is taken into account, but otherwise the scale factor is ignored. Treats x as a stack. It pops the top of the main stack and pushes that value onto stack x. Treats the top element of the stack as a character string and executes it as a string of dc commands. Replaces the number on the top of the stack with its scale factor. Pushes the number of elements in the stack onto the stack. Replaces the top number in the stack with the number of digits in that number. Puts the bracketed string onto the top of the stack. Pops the top two elements of the stack and compares them. Register x is executed if the stated relationship is TRUE. dc uses these characters for array operations. EXAMPLES
To use dc as a calculator proceed as follows: Enter: 1 4 / p [Divide 1 by 4]s. The system responds as follows: 0 Enter: 1 k [ Keep 1 decimal place]s. 1 4 / p The system responds as follows: 0.2 Enter: 3 k [ Keep 3 decimal places]s. 1 4 / p The system responds as follows: 0.250 Enter: 16 63 5 / + p [Divide 63 by 5, add the result to 16]s. The system responds as follows: 28.600 Enter: 16 63 5 + / p [Add 63 and 5, divide the result by 16]s. The system responds as follows: 0.235 You can type the comments (enclosed in brackets), but they are provided only for your information. When you enter dc expressions directly from the keyboard, press the End-of-File key sequence to end the dc session and return to the shell command line. To load and run a dc program file, proceed as follows: Enter: dc prog.dc 5 lf x p [ 5 factorial ]s. The system responds as follows: 120 Enter: 10 lf x p [ 10 factorial ]s. The system responds as follows: 3628800 This interprets the dc program saved in prog.dc, then reads from standard input. The lf x evaluates the function stored in register f, which could be defined in the program file prog.dc as: [ f: compute the factorial of n ]s. [ (n = the top of the stack) ]s. [ If 1>n do b; If 1<n do r ]s. [d 1 >b d 1 <r] sf [ Return f(n) = 1 ]s. [d - 1 +] sb [ Return f(n) = n * f(n-1) ]s. [d 1 - lf x *] sr You can create dc program files with a text editor, or with the -c (compile) flag of the bc command. When you enter dc expressions directly from the keyboard, press the End-of-File key sequence to end the dc session and return to the shell command line. SEE ALSO
Commands: bc(1) dc(1)
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