So you want to tack on a trailing s? on the regex, I guess?
The "unless" condition is not strictly necessary, you might want to take it out; I just wanted to highligt a possible complication. For this particular case you'd probably rather take the risk of a (highly unlikely) false positive rather than make it too sophisticated.
What if the user types in "RNA-binding proteins" as the input, do you want to normalize that back to "RNA[\s-]binding[\s-]proteins?" as well?
hey.....
i do have text where the contents are like as follows,
FILE_TYPE_NUM_01=FILE_TYPE=01|FILE_DESC=Periodic|FILE_SCHDL_TYPE=Daily|FILE_SCHDL=|FILE_SCHDL_TIME=9:00am|RESULTS=B
FILE_TYPE_NUM_02=FILE_TYPE=02|FILE_DESC=NCTO|FILE_SCHDL_TYPE=Daily|FILE_SCHDL=|FILE_SCHDL_TIME=9:00am|RESULTS=M... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have an array with 3 words in it and i have to match all the array contents and display the exact matched sentence i.e all 3 words should match with the sentence.
Here are sentences.
$arr1="Our data suggests that epithelial shape and growth control are unequally affected depending... (5 Replies)
Hi
By using select clause I'm trying to pull out the rows to a variable.
If the variable has 0 row(s) selected then i'm printing some text message
else printing some other text message
if($xyz =~ m/0 row/)
{
print "0 rows ";
}
else
{
print " There are rows";
}
By my problem... (4 Replies)
I am trying to match a pattern exactly in a shell script. I have tried two methods
awk '/\<mpath${CURR_MP}\>/{print $1 $2}' multipath
perl -ne '/\bmpath${CURR_MP}\b/ and print' /var/tmp/multipath
Both these methods require that I use the escape character. I am guessing that is why... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file like follows
.
.
.
White.Jack.is.going.home
Black.Jack.is.going.home
Red.Jack.is.going.home
Jack.is.going.home
.
.
.
when I make:
cat <file> | grep -w "Jack.is.going.home"
it gives:
White.Jack.is.going.home
Black.Jack.is.going.home
Red.Jack.is.going.home... (4 Replies)
Hi friends,
i am using the following grep command for exact word match:
>echo "sachin#tendulkar" | grep -iw "sachin"
output: sachin#tendulkar
as we can see in the above example that its throwinng the exact match(which is not the case as the keyword is sachin and string is... (6 Replies)
Dear all, could you help me with following question. There are two datasets (below). I need to find match between BP values from data1 and data2, and add corresponding CM value from data2 into data1. if there is not exact match, the corresponding CM value should be calculated using interpolation.... (20 Replies)
Hi All,
I am breaking my head in trying to get a command that will exactly match my given string. I have searched net and found few of the options -
grep -F $string file
grep -x $string file
grep "^${string}$" file
awk '/"${string}"/ {print $0}' file
strangely nothing seems to... (3 Replies)
Hello!
I have 2 files named tacs.tmp and tacDB.txt
tacs.tmp looks like this
0
10235647
102700
106800
107200
1105700
tacDB.txt looks like this
100100,Mitsubishi,G410,Handheld,,0,0,0
100200,Siemens,A53,Handheld,,0,0,0
100300,Sony Ericsson,TBD (AAB-1880030-BV),Handheld,,0,0,0... (2 Replies)
I am trying to create a cronjob that will run on startup that will look at a list.txt file to see if there is a later version of a database using database.txt as the source. The matching lines are written to output.
$1 in database.txt will be in list.txt as a partial match. $2 of database.txt... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
dadadodo
dadadodo(1) General Commands Manual dadadodo(1)NAME
dadadodo - exterminate all rational thought
SYNOPSIS
dadadodo [ options ] [ input-files ]
DESCRIPTION
dadadodo is a program that analyses texts for Markov chains of word probabilities and then generates random sentences based on those proba-
bilities. Sometimes these sentences are nonsense, but sometimes they cut right through to the heart of the matter and reveal hidden mean-
ings.
OPTIONS
dadadodo accepts the following options:
-c, -count n
Generate n sentences.
-h, -help
Show summary of options and exit.
-html Output HTML instead of plain text.
-l, -load file
Load compiled data from file ('-' for standard input).
-o, -output file
Save compiled data in file ('-' for standard output).
-p, -pause s
Delay s seconds between paragraphs.
-w, -columns columns
Format output for a device columns character cells in width. If not specified, the value of the environment variable COLUMNS is
used to determine the width. If that variable is not defined, a width of 72 is assumed.
NOTES
Non-option arguments are input files. These should be text files, but may be mail folders or HTML. MIME messages are handled sensibly.
When no output file is specified, sentences will be generated from the input data directly. However, loading a saved file is far faster
than re-parsing the text files each time.
ENVIRONMENT
COLUMNS
Determines the width (in character cells) of the output if the -w, -columns option is not used. If not set, a width of 72 is
assumed.
SEE ALSO
dadadodo's upstream website is http://www.jwz.org/dadadodo/.
AUTHOR
dadadodo was written by Jamie Zawinski.
This manual page was written by Sudhakar Chandrasekharan <thaths@netscape.com>, based on the program's usage message.
dadadodo(1)