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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting if match found go to a particular line in perl Post 302180184 by user_prady on Sunday 30th of March 2008 09:47:35 AM
Old 03-30-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by era
Don't depend on me, I need to be going back to my day job soon.

There's a number of ways to do this, obviously. The old-fashioned variant would be to remember the previous line and print that when you see the terminator. The really brute Perl approach would be to slurp the whole file and substitute everything with an empty string except the line before the terminator. There's one in the Perl FAQ about that; perlfaq6 and scroll around for related questions. (The question about C comments further down the page has some hints, too.)

But the "previous line" solution is absolutely the simplest in this case, if you have no further requirements.

Code:
perl -ne 'BEGIN { $matching = 0; }
  $matching = 1 if (m/^\*Main Start/);
  next unless $matching;
  print $prev if (defined $prev && m/^\*Main End/);
  $prev = $_'

Not sure about the flow control you tried to describe. Are you supposed to remember everything from main start until main end and print that after the output from the last line before main end? (I guess this already qualifies as a pseudo-code implementation of what it takes. But then maybe I would consider a regex substitution over the whole file, or each *Main Start section, after all.)
Thanks a Lot Era for your kindness..I ll try your mentioned way..
 

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TAP::Parser::Source::Perl(3pm)				 Perl Programmers Reference Guide			    TAP::Parser::Source::Perl(3pm)

NAME
TAP::Parser::Source::Perl - Stream Perl output VERSION
Version 3.17 SYNOPSIS
use TAP::Parser::Source::Perl; my $perl = TAP::Parser::Source::Perl->new; my $stream = $perl->source( [ $filename, @args ] )->get_stream; DESCRIPTION
Takes a filename and hopefully returns a stream from it. The filename should be the name of a Perl program. Note that this is a subclass of TAP::Parser::Source. See that module for more methods. METHODS
Class Methods "new" my $perl = TAP::Parser::Source::Perl->new; Returns a new "TAP::Parser::Source::Perl" object. Instance Methods "source" Getter/setter the name of the test program and any arguments it requires. my ($filename, @args) = @{ $perl->source }; $perl->source( [ $filename, @args ] ); "croak"s if $filename could not be found. "switches" my $switches = $perl->switches; my @switches = $perl->switches; $perl->switches( @switches ); Getter/setter for the additional switches to pass to the perl executable. One common switch would be to set an include directory: $perl->switches( ['-Ilib'] ); "get_stream" my $stream = $source->get_stream($parser); Returns a stream of the output generated by executing "source". Must be passed an object that implements a "make_iterator" method. Typically this is a TAP::Parser instance. "shebang" Get the shebang line for a script file. my $shebang = TAP::Parser::Source::Perl->shebang( $some_script ); May be called as a class method "get_taint" Decode any taint switches from a Perl shebang line. # $taint will be 't' my $taint = TAP::Parser::Source::Perl->get_taint( '#!/usr/bin/perl -t' ); # $untaint will be undefined my $untaint = TAP::Parser::Source::Perl->get_taint( '#!/usr/bin/perl' ); SUBCLASSING
Please see "SUBCLASSING" in TAP::Parser for a subclassing overview. Example package MyPerlSource; use strict; use vars '@ISA'; use Carp qw( croak ); use TAP::Parser::Source::Perl; @ISA = qw( TAP::Parser::Source::Perl ); sub source { my ($self, $args) = @_; if ($args) { $self->{file} = $args->[0]; return $self->SUPER::source($args); } return $self->SUPER::source; } # use the version of perl from the shebang line in the test file sub _get_perl { my $self = shift; if (my $shebang = $self->shebang( $self->{file} )) { $shebang =~ /^#!(.*perl.*?)(?:(?:s)|(?:$))/; return $1 if $1; } return $self->SUPER::_get_perl(@_); } SEE ALSO
TAP::Object, TAP::Parser, TAP::Parser::Source, perl v5.12.1 2010-04-26 TAP::Parser::Source::Perl(3pm)
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