Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting sed error - using reserved letters Post 302192475 by karthikn7974 on Wednesday 7th of May 2008 03:25:13 AM
Old 05-07-2008
hey
thanks to all
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

NFS and NIS reserved ports

Does anyone know how to assign rpc ports to NFS or NIS processes on Solaris please ? Thanks, Michael Chnader (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mchnaider
0 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

chkcount variable in bash reserved?

Hi, im experiencing a really strange thing: _____________________________ #!/bin/bash chkcount=0 chkcountmax=3 while ((chkcount < chkcountmax)) do echo "chkcount=$chkount" echo "chkcountmax=$chkountmax" ((chkcount++)) done... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tho99
1 Replies

3. Hardware

/dev/rmt/0mn: write protected or reserved

# mt stat HP DDS-4 DAT (Sun) tape drive: sense key(0x0)= No Additional Sense residual= 0 retries= 0 file no= 0 block no= 0 mt -f /dev/rmt/0mn erase /dev/rmt/0mn: write protected or reserved. Getting error while ufsdump .... --- Dumping / to /dev/rmt/0mn --- DUMP: Date... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vickyingle5
1 Replies

4. Solaris

/dev/rmt/0mn: write protected or reserved

# mt stat HP DDS-4 DAT (Sun) tape drive: sense key(0x0)= No Additional Sense residual= 0 retries= 0 file no= 0 block no= 0 mt -f /dev/rmt/0mn erase /dev/rmt/0mn: write protected or reserved. Getting error while ufsdump .... --- Dumping / to /dev/rmt/0mn --- DUMP: Date... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vickyingle5
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Put parentheses around all capital letters using SED

Hello everyone I tell you that I'm trying to do a bash program that can put parentheses around each capital letter of each line using SED. I tell you probe with: sed -e '1,$s/A/(A)/g' "$file" but only add parentheses in A. then tested with: sed 'y/AB/(A)(B)/' "$archivo" but it... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: adiegorpc
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed command, look for numbers following letters

If I have a set of strings, C21 F231 H42 1C10 1F113 and I want to isolate the ints following the char, what would the sed string be to find numbers after letters? If I do, *, I will get numbers after letters, but I am looking to do something like, sed 's/*/\t*/g' this will give me... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: LMHmedchem
14 Replies

7. AIX

Question about reserved memory

Hi! maybe a stupid question but i recall fixing this issue before (or something similar), On one of my frames I have a huge amount of reserved memory. 25GB to be exact. I am running out of memory and need to add a new lpar. I can't remember exactly how i fixed this issue before and it's... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vpundit
2 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Selective Replacements: Using sed or awk to replace letters with numbers in a very specific way

Hello all. I am a beginner UNIX user who is using UNIX to work on a bioinformatics project for my university. I have a bit of a complicated issue in trying to use sed (or awk) to "find and replace" bases (letters) in a genetics data spreadsheet (converted to a text file, can be either... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mince
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sed - extract a group of Letters/numbers

I have a file with hundreds of lines in it. I wanted to extract anything that matches the following: KR followed by 4 digits: example KR1201 cat list | sed "s///g" Is the closest I've come, and obviously it is not what I want. This would remove all of the items that I want and leave me... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Regex for one to four letters (sed) not GNUsed

I have regular sed on my computer. I am trying to find out a regex for one-four letters. I have tried (\{1,4\} This will match one or four characters, but what if the expression has two characters? Like AB1234 I don't have GNUsed and am having trouble with this regex. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
5 Replies
Text::Context::EitherSide(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			    Text::Context::EitherSide(3pm)

NAME
Text::Context::EitherSide - Get n words either side of search keywords SYNOPSIS
use Text::Context::EitherSide; my $text = "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"; my $context = Text::Context::EitherSide->new($text); $context->as_string("fox") # "... quick brown fox jumped over ..." $context->as_string("fox", "jumped") # "... quick brown fox jumped over the ..." my $context = Text::Context::EitherSide->new($text, context => 1); # 1 word on either side $context->as_string("fox", "jumped", "dog"); # "... brown fox jumped over ... lazy dog", Or, if you don't believe in all this OO rubbish: use Text::Context::EitherSide qw(get_context); get_context(1, $text, "fox", "jumped", "dog") # "... brown fox jumped over ... lazy dog" DESCRIPTION
Suppose you have a large piece of text - typically, say, a web page or a mail message. And now suppose you've done some kind of full-text search on that text for a bunch of keywords, and you want to display the context in which you found the keywords inside the body of the text. A simple-minded way to do that would be just to get the two words either side of each keyword. But hey, don't be too simple minded, because you've got to make sure that the list doesn't overlap. If you have the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog and you extract two words either side of "fox", "jumped" and "dog", you really don't want to end up with quick brown fox jumped over brown fox jumped over the the lazy dog so you need a small amount of smarts. This module has a small amount of smarts. EXPORTABLE
get_context This is primarily an object-oriented module. If you don't care about that, just import the "get_context" subroutine, and call it like so: get_context($num_of_words, $text, @words_to_find) and you'll get back a string with ellipses as in the synopsis. That's all that most people need to know. But if you want to do clever stuff... METHODS
new my $c = Text::Context::EitherSite->new($text [, context=> $n]); Create a new object storing some text to be searched, plus optionally some information about how many words on either side you want. (If you don't like the default of 2.) context $c->context(5); Allows you to get and set the number of the words on either side. as_sparse_list $c->as_sparse_list(@keywords) Returns the keywords, plus n words on either side, as a sparse list; the original text is split into an array of words, and non-contextual elements are replaced with "undef"s. (That's not actually how it works, but conceptually, it's the same.) as_list $c->as_list(@keywords) The same as "as_sparse_list", but single or multiple "undef"s are collapsed into a single ellipsis: (undef, "foo", undef, undef, undef, "bar") becomes ("...", "foo", "...", "bar") as_string $c->as_string(@keywords) Takes the "as_list" output above and joins them all together into a string. This is what most people want from "Text::Context::EitherSide". EXPORT "get_context" is available as a shortcut for Text::Context::EitherSide->new($text, context => $n)->as_string(@words); but needs to be explicitly imported. Nothing is exported by default. SEE ALSO
Text::Context is an even smarter way of extracting a contextual string. AUTHOR
Current maintainer: Tony Bowden Original author: Simon Cozens BUGS and QUERIES Please direct all correspondence regarding this module to: bug-Text-Context-EitherSide@rt.cpan.org COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2005 by Kasei Limited, http://www.kasei.com/ You may use and redistribute this module under the terms of the Artistic License 2.0. http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_2_0 perl v5.10.0 2009-05-04 Text::Context::EitherSide(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:00 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy