Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Removed ^M from Libraries
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Removed ^M from Libraries Post 302231257 by era on Tuesday 2nd of September 2008 02:33:40 AM
Old 09-02-2008
As a minor correction to what bakunin wrote, actually ^M doesn't stand for carriage return, it means the character M at beginning of line (i.e. beginning of file or immediately after a line feed).
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Will Old Files Be Removed

I have windows Xp installed, and decided to install Solaris Sun Unix 10. The hard disk was previousely partitioned into 5 partition. C: = Win98 D = WinXP and e,f,g,h are applications and so on. When istalling Sun Unix, will all the drives be removed, or I will specify where to install it. Thanks... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunsation
5 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

directories are not getting removed

hello Everyone. I'm having the following problem: I have number of installation in the directory. each installation consists of executable file and directory. when I do the new installation I move old one to File_name-Time_stamp. this is done for executable and for directory. Everything is done... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: slavam
6 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

recovering files removed with rm

Hello, I was reading the manual on rm and it states that when you use 'rm' the files are usual recoverable, how is this done? Does it assume that a backup system is in place? Cheers Jack (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jack1981
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

a way to tell what was removed after rm -rf ?

Hello all! I ran rm -rf on a wrong directory, noticed it and hit ctrl-c. Is there any way on a debian machine to tell what actually got deleted? As there were many dirs and files in this directory that I don't care for, I'd like to see if anything important was removed. Or do you know in... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: thosch
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Duplicates to be removed

Hi, I have a text file with 2000 rows and 2000 columns (number of columns might vary from row to row) and "comma" is the delimiter. In every row, there maybe few duplicates and we need to remove those duplicates and "shift left" the consequent values. ex: 111 222 111 555 444 999 666... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: prvnrk
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Removed Lines

Hi Guys, I am using SunOS 5.9 running Oracle Databases on it... I have log files that I suspect that some lines within the logs where removed. How do I tell if indeed some lines within a particular file where removed and by whom? Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phuti
2 Replies

7. Linux

file removed

Hi Team, I have deleted a file accidentally by using rm command. I am not the root(admin) user. Can you please let me know how to get that .tex file? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: darling
2 Replies
LTRIM(3)								 1								  LTRIM(3)

ltrim - Strip whitespace (or other characters) from the beginning of a string

SYNOPSIS
string ltrim (string $str, [string $character_mask]) DESCRIPTION
Strip whitespace (or other characters) from the beginning of a string. PARAMETERS
o $str - The input string. o $character_mask - You can also specify the characters you want to strip, by means of the $character_mask parameter. Simply list all characters that you want to be stripped. With .. you can specify a range of characters. RETURN VALUES
This function returns a string with whitespace stripped from the beginning of $str. Without the second parameter, ltrim(3) will strip these characters: o " " (ASCII 32 ( 0x20)), an ordinary space. o " " (ASCII 9 ( 0x09)), a tab. o " " (ASCII 10 ( 0x0A)), a new line (line feed). o " " (ASCII 13 ( 0x0D)), a carriage return. o "" (ASCII 0 ( 0x00)), the NUL-byte. o "x0B" (ASCII 11 ( 0x0B)), a vertical tab. EXAMPLES
Example #1 Usage example of ltrim(3) <?php $text = " These are a few words :) ... "; $binary = "x09Example stringx0A"; $hello = "Hello World"; var_dump($text, $binary, $hello); print " "; $trimmed = ltrim($text); var_dump($trimmed); $trimmed = ltrim($text, " ."); var_dump($trimmed); $trimmed = ltrim($hello, "Hdle"); var_dump($trimmed); // trim the ASCII control characters at the beginning of $binary // (from 0 to 31 inclusive) $clean = ltrim($binary, "x00..x1F"); var_dump($clean); ?> The above example will output: string(32) " These are a few words :) ... " string(16) " Example string " string(11) "Hello World" string(30) "These are a few words :) ... " string(30) "These are a few words :) ... " string(7) "o World" string(15) "Example string " SEE ALSO
trim(3), rtrim(3). PHP Documentation Group LTRIM(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:30 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy