Hi All!!
I have a large file containing millions of record. My purpose is to extract 7 characters immediately after text '19' from this file (including text '19') and save the result in new file.
So, my OUTPUT would be as under :
191234561
194567894
192789005
198839408
and so on.....
... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I have got one file with more than 120+ million records(35 GB in size). I have to extract some relevant data from file based on some parameter and generate other output file.
What will be the besat and fastest way to extract the ne file.
sample file format :--... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to extract data from a large text file , I want to extract lines which contains a five digit number followed by a hyphen , like
12345- , i tried with egrep ,eg : egrep "+" text.txt
but which returns all the lines which contains any number of digits followed by hyhen ,... (19 Replies)
Hello people :)
That's here my first message to your forum, so I guess it would be fine ^^
I have a request about a code I want to use.
Actually, my system use a large variable, including much informations but those informations can change by more and I want to extract one of thoses... (26 Replies)
Hi i have a php script that works 100% however i don't want this to run on php because of server limits etc. Ideally if i could convert this simple php script to a shell script i can set it up to run on a cron. My mac server has curl on it. So i am assuming i should be using this to download the... (3 Replies)
Dear all,
I want to extract around 300 columns from a very large file with almost 2million columns. There are no headers, but I can find out which column numbers I want. I know I can extract with the function 'cut -f2' for example just the second column but how do I do this for such a large... (1 Reply)
Hi All!!
I have a large file containing millions of records. My purpose is to extract 8 characters immediately from the given file.
222222222|ZRF|2008.pdf|2008|01/29/2009|001|B|C|C
222222222|ZRF|2009.pdf|2009|01/29/2010|001|B|C|C
222222222|ZRF|2010.pdf|2010|01/29/2011|001|B|C|C... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have records in unix file like below. In this file, we have empty fields from 4th Column to 22nd Column. I have some 200000 records in a file. I want to extract records only which have empty fields from 4th field to 22nd filed. This file is comma separated file. what is the unix... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rakeshp
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
cgi::pretty
CGI::Pretty(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide CGI::Pretty(3pm)NAME
CGI::Pretty - module to produce nicely formatted HTML code
SYNOPSIS
use CGI::Pretty qw( :html3 );
# Print a table with a single data element
print table( TR( td( "foo" ) ) );
DESCRIPTION
CGI::Pretty is a module that derives from CGI. It's sole function is to allow users of CGI to output nicely formatted HTML code.
When using the CGI module, the following code:
print table( TR( td( "foo" ) ) );
produces the following output:
<TABLE><TR><TD>foo</TD></TR></TABLE>
If a user were to create a table consisting of many rows and many columns, the resultant HTML code would be quite difficult to read since
it has no carriage returns or indentation.
CGI::Pretty fixes this problem. What it does is add a carriage return and indentation to the HTML code so that one can easily read it.
print table( TR( td( "foo" ) ) );
now produces the following output:
<TABLE>
<TR>
<TD>foo</TD>
</TR>
</TABLE>
Recommendation for when to use CGI::Pretty
CGI::Pretty is far slower than using CGI.pm directly. A benchmark showed that it could be about 10 times slower. Adding newslines and
spaces may alter the rendered appearance of HTML. Also, the extra newlines and spaces also make the file size larger, making the files take
longer to download.
With all those considerations, it is recommended that CGI::Pretty be used primarily for debugging.
Tags that won't be formatted
The following tags are not formatted: <a>, <pre>, <code>, <script>, <textarea>, and <td>. If these tags were formatted, the user would see
the extra indentation on the web browser causing the page to look different than what would be expected. If you wish to add more tags to
the list of tags that are not to be touched, push them onto the @AS_IS array:
push @CGI::Pretty::AS_IS,qw(XMP);
Customizing the Indenting
If you wish to have your own personal style of indenting, you can change the $INDENT variable:
$CGI::Pretty::INDENT = " ";
would cause the indents to be two tabs.
Similarly, if you wish to have more space between lines, you may change the $LINEBREAK variable:
$CGI::Pretty::LINEBREAK = "
";
would create two carriage returns between lines.
If you decide you want to use the regular CGI indenting, you can easily do the following:
$CGI::Pretty::INDENT = $CGI::Pretty::LINEBREAK = "";
AUTHOR
Brian Paulsen <Brian@ThePaulsens.com>, with minor modifications by Lincoln Stein <lstein@cshl.org> for incorporation into the CGI.pm
distribution.
Copyright 1999, Brian Paulsen. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Bug reports and comments to Brian@ThePaulsens.com. You can also write to lstein@cshl.org, but this code looks pretty hairy to me and I'm
not sure I understand it!
SEE ALSO
CGI
perl v5.12.1 2010-04-26 CGI::Pretty(3pm)