as you can see there is a delimiter after c8 "::". Awk sees the rest as fields because it doesn't recognize spaces and tabs as delimiters. So i am basically looking to isolate 20030003ba13f6cc. Can anyone help?
c8::20030003ba13f6cc disk connected configured unknown (2 Replies)
i have a several million line file like this:
M:charitygeneral:water:fairbanks:charitygeneral
field 2 and field 5 are the same
i want to read the file and rot13 or any caesar cipher field 2 and replace the with a random number 1 - 9
anyone know how to do this?
something slightly... (8 Replies)
Hello all, I'm working on an attendance callout script for a school district. I need to change our current layout for the vendor. Currently the data is in the form of:
studentid,period,building,
Heres a sample of some made up records:
500,1,30,
500,2,30,
500,3,30,
500,6,30,... (7 Replies)
Hallo
I have maybe a little bit advanced request....
I need to choose one random part betwen %....
so i have this..
%
text1 text1 text1
text1 text1 text1
text1 text1 text1
%
text2 text2
text2 text2 text2
%
text3 text3 text3
tetx3
%
this choose text between %
awk ' /%/... (8 Replies)
Hi - I have a word GTTCAGAGTTCTACAGTCCGACGAT
I need to extract all the possible "chunks" of 7 or above letter "words" from this.
SO, my out put should be
GTTCAGA
TTCAGAG
TCAGAGT
CAGAGTTCT
TCCGACGAT
CAGTCCGACG
etc.
How can I do that with awk or any other language? I have no... (2 Replies)
Hi
I am new to expect. Please if any one can help on my issue its really appreciable. here is my issue:
I want expect script for random passwords and random commands generation.
please can anyone help me?
Many Thanks in advance (0 Replies)
Hi, I have a small piece of awk code (see below) that generates random numbers.
gawk -F"," 'BEGIN { srand(); for (i = 1; i <= 30; i++) printf("%s AM329_%04d\n",$0,int(36 * rand())+1) }' OFS=, AM329_hole_names.csv
The code works fine and generates alphanumeric numbers like AM329_0001,... (2 Replies)
Need to use dd to generate a large file from a sample file of random data. This is because I don't have /dev/urandom.
I create a named pipe then:
dd if=mynamed.fifo do=myfile.fifo bs=1024 count=1024
but when I cat a file to the fifo that's 1024 random bytes:
cat randomfile.txt >... (7 Replies)
Dear UNIX Friends,
I was wondering if there is a random RGB color generator or any function in any unix platforms.
Please share your ideas.
Thanks (2 Replies)
Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(User Contributed Perl DocumentatPerl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(3)NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices - Negative array index should be used.
AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
DESCRIPTION
Perl treats a negative array subscript as an offset from the end. Given this, the preferred way to get the last element is $x[-1], not
$x[$#x] or $x[@x-1], and the preferred way to get the next-to-last is $x[-2], not "$x[$#x-1" or $x[@x-2].
The biggest argument against the non-preferred forms is that their semantics change when the computed index becomes negative. If @x
contains at least two elements, $x[$#x-1] and $x[@x-2] are equivalent to $x[-2]. But if it contains a single element, $x[$#x-1] and
$x[@x-2] are both equivalent to $x[-1]. Simply put, the preferred form is more likely to do what you actually want.
As Conway points out, the preferred forms also perform better, are more readable, and are easier to maintain.
This policy notices all of the simple forms of the above problem, but does not recognize any of these more complex examples:
$some->[$data_structure]->[$#{$some->[$data_structure]} -1];
my $ref = @arr; $ref->[$#arr];
CONFIGURATION
This Policy is not configurable except for the standard options.
AUTHOR
Chris Dolan <cdolan@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2006-2011 Chris Dolan.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.16.3 2014-06-09 Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(3)