Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting how to modify the value of the variable Post 302204845 by joeyg on Thursday 12th of June 2008 04:36:08 PM
Old 06-12-2008
Hammer & Screwdriver on possible solution

Code:
z=/bb/data3/f4222pdb.dta.new
> echo $z
/bb/data3/f4222pdb.dta.new

> echo $z | cut -d"." -f1-2
/bb/data3/f4222pdb.dta

or, doing the replacement in one command line
Code:
z=/bb/data3/f4222pdb.dta.new
z=$(echo $z | cut -d"." -f1-2)
> echo $z
/bb/data3/f4222pdb.dta

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

modify a file

I'm a new member of the forum, I had this new generate file since I use 'grep' and 'awk', what I want to do is get rid off the all 0s before the numbers, is there any one who could help me to figure it out? Thanks a lot! yun 0000000029 000q7472 2002/03/01 0000000030 000q7472 2002/03/01 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yxiao
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Modify files

Hi everybody, I have a certine file with lots of number, Which I want to add a " in the begging and at the and of each line. Could anyone tell me how can I do it? Cheers (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: amgo
7 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Request to modify script to list multiple parameters for V_fieldid variable

I am posting a script below which essentially excutes the following functions in the described order. 1) From a source directory pools together three files generated by system logs for each user session, tar's these files and archives them as a log set in a destination directory and these... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sammy
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to modify the variable

I have a directory name stored in a variable. Does anyone have a piece of code which checks if this stored directory name ends up with the "/" and if it is missing adds it to the same variable. for example I might have A=/bb/data or A=/bb/data/ which needs to be A=/bb/data/ for sure thanks... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify a file

Hi all Can anyone suggest me a good solution ? My requirement is as follows I have a plain text file similar to this... sending data to 0003345234 here is the output... ,.......... ........... ....... sending data to 00033452ab here is the output... ,.......... ........... .... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ./hari.sh
5 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

grep and modify

if input1 has an expression nouse covert allcolumns in to hashes except 6th column. ex: abc100 has no use in 3rd row and 4th row and became hashes. BUT if input1 1st column keys-1st row has no words in 3rd column (ex: def200 (key) and 1st row has no words in 3rd column (no x/x or y/y or others)... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ruby_sgp
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify line with dynamic variable in awk

Hi, I'm guessing this is probably relatively straight forward to do in awk, but I just can't get my head round it! I have a log file of the following format: 3:03:35 (lmgrd) TIMESTAMP 10/14/2011 3:20:41 (MLM) IN: "MATLAB" user1@host1.private.dns.zone 3:21:05 (MLM) IN: "MATLAB"... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chrissycc
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify a file by another file: add new line and variable after string is found

hello, I have problem with writing/adjusting a shell script. I searched forum and unfortunately couldn't write scipt based on the information I found. I never wtire such so it's hard for me and I do need to modify one script immediately. case looks like: 1. 'file' that needs to be modified... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bipbip
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to modify an output?

I have a list XPAR XPAR XPAR , XPAR , , XPAR ,1, XPAR 196 XPAR 95 XPAR 95,77 This has space and tabs on the second row. I would like it to look like XPAR 1, 196, 95, 77 But I always get the below because of the spaces above. , , ,1, 196 95 95,77 I use... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: priyanka.premra
9 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Please modify solution

Hi Please check my code,here awk -vLIT="$line" '$0 ~ LIT { print LIT,"Found in ",FILENAME; }' $f it is not checking for small alphabets.can u pls modify my code #!/bin/ksh for f in /tmp/satemp/* do cat /tmp/sa/tt.txt| while read line do awk -vLIT="$line" '$0 ~ LIT { print LIT,"Found in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolboy98699
3 Replies
Sub::Override(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Sub::Override(3pm)

NAME
Sub::Override - Perl extension for easily overriding subroutines SYNOPSIS
use Sub::Override; sub foo { 'original sub' }; print foo(); # prints 'original sub' my $override = Sub::Override->new( foo => sub { 'overridden sub' } ); print foo(); # prints 'overridden sub' $override->restore; print foo(); # prints 'original sub' DESCRIPTION
The Problem Sometimes subroutines need to be overridden. In fact, your author does this constantly for tests. Particularly when testing, using a Mock Object can be overkill when all you want to do is override one tiny, little function. Overriding a subroutine is often done with syntax similar to the following. { local *Some::sub = sub {'some behavior'}; # do something } # original subroutine behavior restored This has a few problems. { local *Get::some_feild = { 'some behavior' }; # do something } In the above example, not only have we probably misspelled the subroutine name, but even if their had been a subroutine with that name, we haven't overridden it. These two bugs can be subtle to detect. Further, if we're attempting to localize the effect by placing this code in a block, the entire construct is cumbersome. Hook::LexWrap also allows us to override sub behavior, but I can never remember the exact syntax. An easier way to replace subroutines Instead, "Sub::Override" allows the programmer to simply name the sub to replace and to supply a sub to replace it with. my $override = Sub::Override->new('Some::sub', sub {'new data'}); # which is equivalent to: my $override = Sub::Override->new; $override->replace('Some::sub', sub { 'new data' }); You can replace multiple subroutines, if needed: $override->replace('Some::sub1', sub { 'new data1' }); $override->replace('Some::sub2', sub { 'new data2' }); $override->replace('Some::sub3', sub { 'new data3' }); If replacing the subroutine succeeds, the object is returned. This allows the programmer to chain the calls, if this style of programming is preferred: $override->replace('Some::sub1', sub { 'new data1' }) ->replace('Some::sub2', sub { 'new data2' }) ->replace('Some::sub3', sub { 'new data3' }); A subroutine may be replaced as many times as desired. This is most useful when testing how code behaves with multiple conditions. $override->replace('Some::thing', sub { 0 }); is($object->foo, 'wibble', 'wibble is returned if Some::thing is false'); $override->replace('Some::thing', sub { 1 }); is($object->foo, 'puppies', 'puppies are returned if Some::thing is true'); Restoring subroutines If the object falls out of scope, the original subs are restored. However, if you need to restore a subroutine early, just use the restore method: my $override = Sub::Override->new('Some::sub', sub {'new data'}); # do stuff $override->restore; Which is somewhat equivalent to: { my $override = Sub::Override->new('Some::sub', sub {'new data'}); # do stuff } If you have override more than one subroutine with an override object, you will have to explicitly name the subroutine you wish to restore: $override->restore('This::sub'); Note "restore()" will always restore the original behavior of the subroutine no matter how many times you have overridden it. Which package is the subroutine in? Ordinarily, you want to fully qualify the subroutine by including the package name. However, failure to fully qualify the subroutine name will assume the current package. package Foo; use Sub::Override; sub foo { 23 }; my $override = Sub::Override->new( foo => sub { 42 } ); # assumes Foo::foo print foo(); # prints 42 $override->restore; print foo(); # prints 23 METHODS
new my $sub = Sub::Override->new; my $sub = Sub::Override->new($sub_name, $sub_ref); Creates a new "Sub::Override" instance. Optionally, you may override a subroutine while creating a new object. replace $sub->replace($sub_name, $sub_body); Temporarily replaces a subroutine with another subroutine. Returns the instance, so chaining the method is allowed: $sub->replace($sub_name, $sub_body) ->replace($another_sub, $another_body); This method will "croak" is the subroutine to be replaced does not exist. override my $sub = Sub::Override->new; $sub->override($sub_name, $sub_body); "override" is an alternate name for "replace". They are the same method. restore $sub->restore($sub_name); Restores the previous behavior of the subroutine. This will happen automatically if the "Sub::Override" object falls out of scope. EXPORT
None by default. BUGS
Probably. Tell me about 'em. SEE ALSO
o Hook::LexWrap -- can also override subs, but with different capabilities o Test::MockObject -- use this if you need to alter an entire class AUTHOR
Curtis "Ovid" Poe, "<ovid [at] cpan [dot] org>" Reverse the name to email me. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2004-2005 by Curtis "Ovid" Poe This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.2 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.10.1 2010-04-01 Sub::Override(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:06 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy