i have a HTML report file..its in attachment(a part of the whole report is attached..name "input html.doc").also its source is attached in "report source code.txt"
i just want to seperate the datas like in first line it should be..
NHTEST-3848498958-NHTEST-10.2-no-baloo a
and so on for whole... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a xml file for example as described below
<xml>
<address>
<street><street>
<address/>
<isbn>426728783932020308393930303</isbn>
<book>
<name>
</name>
</book>
.
.
.
</xml>
My problem is to get the isbn number from the above described file using ksh script. Could... (6 Replies)
Hey guys,
I have this file generated by me... i want to create some HTML output from it.
The problem is that i am really confused about how do I go about reading the file.
The file is in the following format:
TID1 Name1 ATime=xx AResult=yyy AExpected=yyy BTime=xx BResult=yyy... (8 Replies)
i wanna passing an argument which read in a file or a set of files if the files are given in the command line, otherwise use STDIN if no file argument.
i got something like that, but it is not really working.
so can anyone help me? which one is better to use for and how? Use perl.
Thank you
... (0 Replies)
Good day. I am doing an enq -WA (AIX), to get a list of the print queues, I then compare that to the /etc/hosts file to 'match' the IP address associated with the print queues. What I want to do is to run a traceroute with up to 5 hops, and perform an output to a file with some "specific items".... (0 Replies)
Hi all, I've done some searching here but haven't found exactly what I'm looking for so I thought I'd post up and see if someone can help out.
I'm working on a shell script that I would like to store environment variables in an external file. I'm familiar with sourcing a file with variables in... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Although I was able to find past XML parsing questions, as the questions were a little different than this, I had a pretty hard time adapting those answers to this scenario.
-> May I ask if anyone knows how to extract the IP addresses of the below "servers.xml" file into an array... (5 Replies)
Is there any tool that can parsing ksh script into grammar format?
e.g. the tool can parse the following ksh script:
echo "hello"> abc.txt
cp /home/user/abc/.profile /home/user/abc/myprofile
into
GENERATE abc.txt
COPY /home/user/abc/.profile TO /home/user/abc/myprofile
My server OS... (2 Replies)
Hi. I have a piece of code that reads and parses command line options. I'd like to alter it slightly to read from a string (that's set elsewhere in the script) rather than directly from the command line (arg). Can somebody show me how to do this? Many thanks.
My code is as follows:
typeset... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: user052009
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
unknown
unknown(n) Tcl Built-In Commands unknown(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
unknown - Handle attempts to use non-existent commands
SYNOPSIS
unknown cmdName ?arg arg ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
This command is invoked by the Tcl interpreter whenever a script tries to invoke a command that doesn't exist. The default implementation
of unknown is a library procedure defined when Tcl initializes an interpreter. You can override the default unknown to change its func-
tionality. Note that there is no default implementation of unknown in a safe interpreter.
If the Tcl interpreter encounters a command name for which there is not a defined command, then Tcl checks for the existence of a command
named unknown. If there is no such command, then the interpreter returns an error. If the unknown command exists, then it is invoked with
arguments consisting of the fully-substituted name and arguments for the original non-existent command. The unknown command typically does
things like searching through library directories for a command procedure with the name cmdName, or expanding abbreviated command names to
full-length, or automatically executing unknown commands as sub-processes. In some cases (such as expanding abbreviations) unknown will
change the original command slightly and then (re-)execute it. The result of the unknown command is used as the result for the original
non-existent command.
The default implementation of unknown behaves as follows. It first calls the auto_load library procedure to load the command. If this
succeeds, then it executes the original command with its original arguments. If the auto-load fails then unknown calls auto_execok to see
if there is an executable file by the name cmd. If so, it invokes the Tcl exec command with cmd and all the args as arguments. If cmd
can't be auto-executed, unknown checks to see if the command was invoked at top-level and outside of any script. If so, then unknown takes
two additional steps. First, it sees if cmd has one of the following three forms: !!, !event, or ^old^new?^?. If so, then unknown carries
out history substitution in the same way that csh would for these constructs. Finally, unknown checks to see if cmd is a unique abbrevia-
tion for an existing Tcl command. If so, it expands the command name and executes the command with the original arguments. If none of the
above efforts has been able to execute the command, unknown generates an error return. If the global variable auto_noload is defined, then
the auto-load step is skipped. If the global variable auto_noexec is defined then the auto-exec step is skipped. Under normal circum-
stances the return value from unknown is the return value from the command that was eventually executed.
SEE ALSO
info(n), proc(n), interp(n), library(n)
KEYWORDS
error, non-existent command
Tcl unknown(n)