I generally save a lot of web pages for reading offline which works out great for school. Now I have to spend a lot of time on the bus and I am looking for the best way to read some of these webpages using my Nokia 7610.
I have uploaded the files to my phone, but they are deadly deadly slow to... (2 Replies)
Say you have this numeric variable that can be set by the user but you never want it to leave a certain range when it gets printed. How could you use parameter expansion such that it will never expand outside of that boundary? Thanks
---------- Post updated at 11:09 PM ---------- Previous update... (3 Replies)
Hello Unix Gurus
I am having a problem with one of the files that i am generating using a Unix Script. This Unix Scripts connects to the MY SQL Server and loads the data into a Text file. While generating the Text file for one of the tables the value in one of the column is as follows.
<p>... (3 Replies)
I store different variance of the below in an xml file. and apparently, xml has an issue loading up data like this because it contains html tags. i would like to preserve this data as it is, but unfortunately, xml says i cant.
so i have to strip out all the html tags.
the examples i found... (9 Replies)
I tried to find elegant (or at least simple) way to remove all but couple of html tags from html file, but all examples I found dealt with removing all the tags.
The logic of the script would be:
- if there is <li> or <ul> on the line, do nothing (=write same line to output)
- if there is:... (0 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
You will write a script that will remove all HTML tags from an HTML document and remove any consecutive... (3 Replies)
I have made the following examples that print various parameter expansions
text: iv-hhz-sac/hpac/hhz.d/iv.hpac..hhz.d.2016.250.070018.sac
(text%.*): iv-hhz-sac/hpac/hhz.d/iv.hpac..hhz.d.2016.250.070018
(text%%.*): iv-hhz-sac/hpac/hhz
(text#*.): d/iv.hpac..hhz.d.2016.250.070018.sac... (2 Replies)
#!/bin/bash
SNMPW='/usr/bin/snmpwalk'
while read h i
do
loc=$($SNMPW -v3 -u 'Myusername' -l authPriv -a SHA -A 'Password1' -x AES -X 'Password2' $i sysLocation.0 2>/dev/null)
loc=${loc:-" is not snmpable."}
loc=${loc##*: }
loc=${loc//,/}
echo "$i,$h,$loc"
done < $1
My question is ... ... (1 Reply)
I am trying to become more fluent with the interworking of bash and minimize the number of external calls.
Sample Data. This will be the response of the snmp query.
SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0 = STRING: SomeHostName
SNMPv2-MIB::sysObjectID.0 = OID: SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.9.1.1745... (5 Replies)
Hello All,
Could you please do help me here as I would like to perform parameter expansion in shell over a parameter expansion.
Let's say I have following variable.
path="/var/talend/nat/cdc"
Now to get only nat I could do following.
path1="${path%/*}"
path1="${path1##*/}"
Here... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: RavinderSingh13
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
line
line(1) General Commands Manual line(1)NAME
line - Reads one line from standard input
SYNOPSIS
line
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
line: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
None
DESCRIPTION
The line command copies one line, up to and including a newline, from standard input and writes it to standard output. Use this command
within a shell command file to read from your terminal. The line command always writes at least a newline character.
NOTES
The line utility has no internationalization features and is marked LEGACY in XCU Issue 5. Use the read utility instead.
EXIT STATUS
Success. End-of-File.
EXAMPLES
To read a line from the keyboard and append it to a file, enter: echo 'Enter comments for the log:' echo ': c' line >>log
This shell procedure displays the message: Enter comments for the log:
It then reads a line of text from the keyboard and adds it to the end of the file log. The echo ': c' command displays a : (colon)
prompt. See the echo command for information about the c escape sequence.
SEE ALSO
Commands: echo(1), ksh(1), read(1), Bourne shell sh(1b), POSIX shell sh(1p)
Functions: read(2)
Standards: standards(5)line(1)