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Full Discussion: Appending in a file
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Appending in a file Post 302207012 by vinay123 on Thursday 19th of June 2008 02:17:01 AM
Old 06-19-2008
Appending in a file

Hi,

I have file named Ex.txt which has the contents like this-

<FndManagers>
Mng={{PID|8819|LB}|75.000000|75.000000}
Mng={{PID|25069|ML}|25.000000|0.000000}
Mng={{PID|6034033|ML}|0.000000|25.000000}
</FndManagers>

I have a code which searches for the number 8819 and appends with the number 20.00.

perl -pe 's/(\|8819\}.*)\}$/$1|20.0}/' Ex.txt

Now I need to append 0 for the other lines in a similar way and th efile should look
like this-

<FndManagers>
Mng={{PID|8819|LB}|75.000000|75.000000|20.0}
Mng={{PID|25069|ML}|25.000000|0.000000|0}
Mng={{PID|6034033|ML}|0.000000|25.000000|0}
</FndManagers>
 

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MATHERR(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							MATHERR(3)

NAME
matherr - SVID math library exception handling SYNOPSIS
#define _SVID_SOURCE #include <math.h> int matherr(struct exception *exc); extern _LIB_VERSION_TYPE _LIB_VERSION; Link with -lm. DESCRIPTION
The System V Interface Definition (SVID) specifies that various math functions should invoke a function called matherr() if a math excep- tion is detected. This function is called before the math function returns; after matherr() returns, the system then returns to the math function, which in turn returns to the caller. The matherr() mechanism is supported by glibc, but is now obsolete: new applications should use the techniques described in math_error(7) and fenv(3). This page documents the glibc matherr() mechanism as an aid for maintaining and porting older applications. To employ matherr(), the programmer must define the _SVID_SOURCE feature test macro, and assign the value _SVID_ to the external variable _LIB_VERSION. The system provides a default version of matherr(). This version does nothing, and returns zero (see below for the significance of this). The default matherr() can be overridden by a programmer-defined version, which will be invoked when an exception occurs. The function is invoked with one argument, a pointer to an exception structure, defined as follows: struct exception { int type; /* Exception type */ char *name; /* Name of function causing exception */ double arg1; /* 1st argument to function */ double arg2; /* 2nd argument to function */ double retval; /* Function return value */ } The type field has one of the following values: DOMAIN A domain error occurred (the function argument was outside the range for which the function is defined). The return value depends on the function; errno is set to EDOM. SING A pole error occurred (the function result is an infinity). The return value in most cases is HUGE (the largest single preci- sion floating-point number), appropriately signed. In most cases, errno is set to EDOM. OVERFLOW An overflow occurred. In most cases, the value HUGE is returned, and errno is set to ERANGE. UNDERFLOW An underflow occurred. 0.0 is returned, and errno is set to ERANGE. TLOSS Total loss of significance. 0.0 is returned, and errno is set to ERANGE. PLOSS Partial loss of significance. This value is unused on glibc (and many other systems). The arg1 and arg2 fields are the arguments supplied to the function (arg2 is undefined for functions that take only one argument). The retval field specifies the return value that the math function will return to its caller. The programmer-defined matherr() can modify this field to change the return value of the math function. If the matherr() function returns zero, then the system sets errno as described above, and may print an error message on standard error (see below). If the matherr() function returns a nonzero value, then the system does not set errno, and doesn't print an error message. Math functions that employ matherr() The table below lists the functions and circumstances in which matherr() is called. The "Type" column indicates the value assigned to exc->type when calling matherr(). The "Result" column is the default return value assigned to exc->retval. The "Msg?" and "errno" columns describe the default behavior if matherr() returns zero. If the "Msg?" columns contains "y", then the sys- tem prints an error message on standard error. The table uses the following notations and abbreviations: x first argument to function y second argument to function fin finite value for argument neg negative value for argument int integral value for argument o/f result overflowed u/f result underflowed |x| absolute value of x X_TLOSS is a constant defined in <math.h> Function Type Result Msg? errno acos(|x|>1) DOMAIN HUGE y EDOM asin(|x|>1) DOMAIN HUGE y EDOM atan2(0,0) DOMAIN HUGE y EDOM acosh(x<1) DOMAIN NAN y EDOM atanh(|x|>1) DOMAIN NAN y EDOM atanh(|x|==1) SING (x>0.0)? y EDOM HUGE_VAL : -HUGE_VAL cosh(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE sinh(fin) o/f OVERFLOW (x>0.0) ? n ERANGE HUGE : -HUGE sqrt(x<0) DOMAIN 0.0 y EDOM hypot(fin,fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE exp(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE exp(fin) u/f UNDERFLOW 0.0 n ERANGE exp2(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE exp2(fin) u/f UNDERFLOW 0.0 n ERANGE exp10(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE exp10(fin) u/f UNDERFLOW 0.0 n ERANGE j0(|x|>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE j1(|x|>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE jn(|x|>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE y0(x>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE y1(x>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE yn(x>X_TLOSS) TLOSS 0.0 y ERANGE y0(0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM y0(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM y1(0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM y1(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM yn(n,0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM yn(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM lgamma(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE lgamma(-int) or SING HUGE y EDOM lgamma(0) tgamma(fin) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE_VAL n ERANGE tgamma(-int) SING NAN y EDOM tgamma(0) SING copysign( y ERANGE HUGE_VAL,x) log(0) SING -HUGE y EDOM log(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM log2(0) SING -HUGE n EDOM log2(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE n EDOM log10(0) SING -HUGE y EDOM log10(x<0) DOMAIN -HUGE y EDOM pow(0.0,0.0) DOMAIN 0.0 y EDOM pow(x,y) o/f OVERFLOW HUGE n ERANGE pow(x,y) u/f UNDERFLOW 0.0 n ERANGE pow(NaN,0.0) DOMAIN x n EDOM 0**neg DOMAIN 0.0 y EDOM neg**non-int DOMAIN 0.0 y EDOM scalb() o/f OVERFLOW (x>0.0) ? n ERANGE HUGE_VAL : -HUGE_VAL scalb() u/f UNDERFLOW copysign( n ERANGE 0.0,x) fmod(x,0) DOMAIN x y EDOM remainder(x,0) DOMAIN NAN y EDOM EXAMPLE
The example program demonstrates the use of matherr() when calling log(3). The program takes up to three command-line arguments. The first argument is the floating-point number to be given to log(3). If the optional second argument is provided, then _LIB_VERSION is set to _SVID_ so that matherr() is called, and the integer supplied in the command-line argument is used as the return value from matherr(). If the optional third command-line argument is supplied, then it specifies an alternative return value that matherr() should assign as the return value of the math function. The following example run, where log(3) is given an argument of 0.0, does not use matherr(): $ ./a.out 0.0 errno: Numerical result out of range x=-inf In the following run, matherr() is called, and returns 0: $ ./a.out 0.0 0 matherr SING exception in log() function args: 0.000000, 0.000000 retval: -340282346638528859811704183484516925440.000000 log: SING error errno: Numerical argument out of domain x=-340282346638528859811704183484516925440.000000 The message "log: SING error" was printed by the C library. In the following run, matherr() is called, and returns a nonzero value: $ ./a.out 0.0 1 matherr SING exception in log() function args: 0.000000, 0.000000 retval: -340282346638528859811704183484516925440.000000 x=-340282346638528859811704183484516925440.000000 In this case, the C library did not print a message, and errno was not set. In the following run, matherr() is called, changes the return value of the math function, and returns a nonzero value: $ ./a.out 0.0 1 12345.0 matherr SING exception in log() function args: 0.000000, 0.000000 retval: -340282346638528859811704183484516925440.000000 x=12345.000000 Program source #define _SVID_SOURCE #include <errno.h> #include <math.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> static int matherr_ret = 0; /* Value that matherr() should return */ static int change_retval = 0; /* Should matherr() change function's return value? */ static double new_retval; /* New function return value */ int matherr(struct exception *exc) { fprintf(stderr, "matherr %s exception in %s() function ", (exc->type == DOMAIN) ? "DOMAIN" : (exc->type == OVERFLOW) ? "OVERFLOW" : (exc->type == UNDERFLOW) ? "UNDERFLOW" : (exc->type == SING) ? "SING" : (exc->type == TLOSS) ? "TLOSS" : (exc->type == PLOSS) ? "PLOSS" : "???", exc->name); fprintf(stderr, " args: %f, %f ", exc->arg1, exc->arg2); fprintf(stderr, " retval: %f ", exc->retval); if (change_retval) exc->retval = new_retval; return matherr_ret; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { double x; if (argc < 2) { fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <argval>" " [<matherr-ret> [<new-func-retval>]] ", argv[0]); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (argc > 2) { _LIB_VERSION = _SVID_; matherr_ret = atoi(argv[2]); } if (argc > 3) { change_retval = 1; new_retval = atof(argv[3]); } x = log(atof(argv[1])); if (errno != 0) perror("errno"); printf("x=%f ", x); exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); } SEE ALSO
fenv(3), math_error(7), standards(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2008-07-21 MATHERR(3)
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