Hm, I would think it depends on what the poster has really typed when he entered the perl statement's substitution.
If he pressed ^V and then hit Enter then ^M should represent \015.
But if he actually only typed a caret (or circumflex) followed by upper case M,
yes than it just represents those Ms.
Maybe he should pipe his statement from the history into an octal dump to make sure?
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
echo
echo(1) General Commands Manual echo(1)NAME
echo - echo (print) arguments
SYNOPSIS
[arg] ...
DESCRIPTION
writes its arguments separated by blanks and terminated by a new-line on the standard output. It also understands C-like escape conven-
tions; beware of conflicts with the shell's use of
write an alert character
backspace
print line without appending a new-line
form-feed
new-line
carriage return
tab
vertical tab
backslash
the 8-bit character whose
ASCII code is the 1-, 2-, 3- or 4-digit octal number n, whose first character must be a zero.
write an 8-bit value that is the zero-, one-, two- or three-digit octal number
num
is useful for producing diagnostics in command files and for sending known data into a pipe.
Notes
Berkeley differs from this implementation. The former does not implement the backslash escapes. However, the semantics of the escape can
be obtained by using the option. The echo command implemented as a built-in function of follows the Berkeley semantics (see csh(1)).
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables
determines the interpretation of arg as single and/or multi-byte characters.
If is not specified in the environment or is set to the empty string, the value of is used as a default for each unspecified or empty vari-
able. If is not specified or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see lang(5)) is used instead of If any internationalization
variable contains an invalid setting, behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C". See environ(5).
International Code Set Support
Single- and multi-byte character code sets are supported.
AUTHOR
was developed by OSF and HP.
SEE ALSO sh(1).
BUGS
No characters are printed after the first This is not normally a problem.
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE echo(1)