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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Question? Post 302204530 by skyineyes on Thursday 12th of June 2008 12:27:45 AM
Old 06-12-2008
Question?

what will be the output and why??

.$val1=10; val2=25;
$ x:=${val1-val2:=35}
$ echo $x;
 

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NCFLINT(1)						      General Commands Manual							NCFLINT(1)

NAME
ncflint - netCDF File Interpolator SYNTAX
ncflint [-3] [-4] [-6] [-A] [-C] [-c] [-D dbg] [-d dim,[ min][,[ max]]] [-F] [-h] [-i var,val3][-L dfl_lvl][-l path] [-O] [-p path] [-R] [-r] [-t thr_nbr] [-v var[,...]] [-w wgt[, wgt2]] [-X box] [-x] file1 file2 file3 DESCRIPTION
ncflint creates an output file that is a linear combination of the input files. This linear combination can be a weighted average, a nor- malized weighted average, or an interpolation of the input files. Coordinate variables are not acted upon in any case, they are simply copied from file_1. There are two conceptually distinct methods of using ncflint. The first method is to specify the weight each input file is to have in the output file. In this method, the value val3 of a variable in the output file file_3 is determined from its values val1 and val2 in the two input files according to wgt1*val1+wgt2*val2 Here at least wgt1, and, optionally, wgt2, are specified on the command line with the -w (or --weight or --wgt_var ) switch. If only IR wgt1 is specified then wgt2 is automatically computed as wgt2=1-wgt1. Note that weights larger than 1 are allowed. Thus it is possible to specify wgt1=2 and wgt2=-3. One can use this functionality to multiply all the values in a given file by a constant. The second method of using ncflint is to specify the interpolation option with -i (or with the --ntp or --interpolate long options). This is really the inverse of the first method in the following sense. When the user specifies the weights directly, ncflint has no work to do besides multiplying the input values by their respective weights and adding the results together to produce the output values. This assumes it is the weights that are known a priori. In another class of cases it is the "arrival value" (i.e., val3 ) of a particular vari- able var that is known a priori. In this case, the implied weights can always be inferred by examining the values of var in the input files. This results in one equation in two unknowns, wgt1 and wgt2: val3=wgt1*val1+wgt2*val2. Unique determination of the weights requires imposing the additional constraint of normalization on the weights: wgt1+wgt2=1. Thus, to use the interpolation option, the user specifies var and val3 with the -i option. ncflint will compute wgt1 and wgt2, and use these weights on all variables to generate the output file. Although var may have any number of dimensions in the input files, it must represent a single, scalar value. Thus any dimensions associated with var must be "degenerate", i.e., of size one. If neither -i nor -w is specified on the command line, ncflint defaults to weighting each input file equally in the output file. This is equivalent to specifying -w0.5 or -w0.5,0.5. Attempting to specify both .BR -i and -w methods in the same command is an error. ncflint is programmed not to interpolate variables of type NC_CHAR and NC_BYTE. This behavior is hardcoded. AUTHOR
NCO manual pages written by Charlie Zender and Brian Mays. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <http://sf.net/bugs/?group_id=3331>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1995-2010 Charlie Zender This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU- LAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO
The full documentation for NCO is maintained as a Texinfo manual called the NCO User's Guide. Because NCO is mathematical in nature, the documentation includes TeX-intensive portions not viewable on character-based displays. Hence the only complete and authoritative versions of the NCO User's Guide are the PDF (recommended), DVI, and Postscript versions at <http://nco.sf.net/nco.pdf>, <http://nco.sf.net/nco.dvi>, and <http://nco.sf.net/nco.ps>, respectively. HTML and XML versions are available at <http://nco.sf.net/nco.html> and <http://nco.sf.net/nco.xml>, respectively. If the info and NCO programs are properly installed at your site, the command info nco should give you access to the complete manual, except for the TeX-intensive portions. HOMEPAGE
The NCO homepage at <http://nco.sf.net> contains more information. NCFLINT(1)
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