This command does not work for me. any ideas???
esc mode :$s/word-to-find/word-to-replace/g
For. e.g. :$s/mumbai/pune/g
Here word "mumbai" is replace with "pune" (1 Reply)
i want to split a big line based on the position.
example :
I have a single line which has 2300 characters.
i want to split from 1 character to 300th characters as first line
and 301th to 600 as second line and 601th to 900 as third line ...till the end of the string.
Can anyone help... (1 Reply)
Hi all;
I'm having headache on append one line to another based on the fix position.Hope u guys can help.
All i need to do is append the line that start with '3' to a line which start with '1' and the position for line 3 that i need to append is 22.
The original file look like this:
... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
While I was writing one shell script , I just got struck at this point.
I need to extract words from a file at some specified position and do some comparison operation and need to replace the extracted word with another word.
Eg : I like Orange very much.
I need to replace... (19 Replies)
Trying to use sed - but having no luck.
I have a text file - I want to replace whatever character is in position 106, 157 and 237 w/ the string "xxx". Want this change for all lines w/in that text file.
I'm open to using awk or whatever command would be best for replacing characters based... (5 Replies)
The file has record length 200. And i have 100 search strings which are ten digits of character from 1 to 10 characters all of them are unique, they need to searched in a file. Please help me to pull the records based on position (say from 1-10).
test data
1FAHP2DW0BG115206RASHEED ... (6 Replies)
I want to remove text from nth position to nth position couple of times in same line
my line is
"hello is there anyone can help me with this question"
I need like this
ello is there anyone can help me with question
'h' is removed and 'this' removed from the line. I want to do this... (5 Replies)
Hey!
I'm new to C. I need to covert certain values using C. please see the below. I have figured out the logic to do it. Please provide some hints to do this with C
Logic:
If first position of POS = 0, shift POS to the left one byte.
If third position of POS = 0, move spaces to third... (1 Reply)
Hi I have a text file that I want to change some of the characters based on their position. My file contain multiple lines and characters should be counted continuously line by line. For example, I want to convert the 150th T to C. What can I do? Here is a portion of my file:... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file with multiple lines(fixed width dat file). I want to search for '02' in the positions 45-46 and if available, in that lines, I need to replace value in position 359 with blank. As I am new to unix, I am not able to figure out how to do this. Can you please help me to achieve... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pradhikshan
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
bytes5.18
bytes(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide bytes(3pm)NAME
bytes - Perl pragma to force byte semantics rather than character semantics
NOTICE
This pragma reflects early attempts to incorporate Unicode into perl and has since been superseded. It breaks encapsulation (i.e. it
exposes the innards of how the perl executable currently happens to store a string), and use of this module for anything other than
debugging purposes is strongly discouraged. If you feel that the functions here within might be useful for your application, this possibly
indicates a mismatch between your mental model of Perl Unicode and the current reality. In that case, you may wish to read some of the perl
Unicode documentation: perluniintro, perlunitut, perlunifaq and perlunicode.
SYNOPSIS
use bytes;
... chr(...); # or bytes::chr
... index(...); # or bytes::index
... length(...); # or bytes::length
... ord(...); # or bytes::ord
... rindex(...); # or bytes::rindex
... substr(...); # or bytes::substr
no bytes;
DESCRIPTION
The "use bytes" pragma disables character semantics for the rest of the lexical scope in which it appears. "no bytes" can be used to
reverse the effect of "use bytes" within the current lexical scope.
Perl normally assumes character semantics in the presence of character data (i.e. data that has come from a source that has been marked as
being of a particular character encoding). When "use bytes" is in effect, the encoding is temporarily ignored, and each string is treated
as a series of bytes.
As an example, when Perl sees "$x = chr(400)", it encodes the character in UTF-8 and stores it in $x. Then it is marked as character data,
so, for instance, "length $x" returns 1. However, in the scope of the "bytes" pragma, $x is treated as a series of bytes - the bytes that
make up the UTF8 encoding - and "length $x" returns 2:
$x = chr(400);
print "Length is ", length $x, "
"; # "Length is 1"
printf "Contents are %vd
", $x; # "Contents are 400"
{
use bytes; # or "require bytes; bytes::length()"
print "Length is ", length $x, "
"; # "Length is 2"
printf "Contents are %vd
", $x; # "Contents are 198.144"
}
chr(), ord(), substr(), index() and rindex() behave similarly.
For more on the implications and differences between character semantics and byte semantics, see perluniintro and perlunicode.
LIMITATIONS
bytes::substr() does not work as an lvalue().
SEE ALSO
perluniintro, perlunicode, utf8
perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 bytes(3pm)