Korn Shell Scripting on Solaris 9
Hello, this is my first post, I figure I share a problem and how I fixed it as well as ask a question that I'm currently stuck on. A version of "Give a Penny" "Take a Penny"
First Problem - I'm currently writing an automated version of one of the two types... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a shell script with many lines as below:
comment on column dcases.proj_seq_num is dcases_1sq;
....
....
I want the above script to be as below:
comment on column dcases.proj_seq_num is 'dcases_1sq';
I want to have single quotes like that as above for the entire shell... (2 Replies)
hey all,
i made a simple .sh like this:
echo "<style media="screen" type="text/css">@import url("main.css");</style>"
but the output is:
<style media=screen type=text/css>@import url(main.css);</style>
i want to keep double-quotes, can anyone help me?
thanks (3 Replies)
Hi,
I've been trying to write a regex to use in egrep (in a shell script) that'll fetch the names of all the files that match a particular pattern. I expect to match the following line in a file:
Name = "abc"
The regex I'm using to match the same is:
egrep -l '(^) *= *" ** *"$' /PATH_TO_SEARCH... (6 Replies)
i want to replace mistaken quotes in line starting with tag 300 and relocate the quote in the correct position so the input is
223;25
224;20100428064823;1;0;0;0;0;0;0;0;8;1;3;9697;18744;;;;;;;;;;;;
300;X;Event:... (3 Replies)
I need to write a Bash script to process a data file that is in this format:
1 A B C D E
2 F G "H H" I J
As you can see, the data is delimited by a space, but there are also some fields that contain spaces and are surrounded by double-quotes. An example of that is "H H".
I wrote... (7 Replies)
Can somebody supply me with a simple way to get a value between
two double quotes?
Example:
input = ADR base is "/u01/app/oracle"
output = /u01/app/oracle
Thanks to all who answer (4 Replies)
My question is, "Do I not understand, or is my information out of date?"
I am trying to just be a student, rtfm'ing. I am working on my work systems. Is it simply that the book was printed in 2002 and a lot has changed since then, or did I miss something?
Working in Korn Shell.
I have been... (5 Replies)
Hi All ,
We have source data file as csv file and since data could contain commas ,each attribute is quoted into double quotes.However problem is that some of the attributa data also contain double quotes which is converted to double double quote while creating csv file
XLs data :
... (2 Replies)
From:
1,2,3,4,5,This is a test
6,7,8,9,0,"This, is a test"
1,9,2,8,3,"This is a ""test"""
4,7,3,1,8,""""
To:
1,2,3,4,5,This is a test
6,7,8,9,0,"This; is a test"
1,9,2,8,3,"This is a ''test''"
4,7,3,1,8,"''"Is there an easy syntax I'm overlooking? There will always be an odd number... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Michael Stora
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
seek
seek(n) Tcl Built-In Commands seek(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
seek - Change the access position for an open channel
SYNOPSIS
seek channelId offset ?origin?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Changes the current access position for channelId.
ChannelId must be an identifier for an open channel such as a Tcl standard channel (stdin, stdout, or stderr), the return value from an
invocation of open or socket, or the result of a channel creation command provided by a Tcl extension.
The offset and origin arguments specify the position at which the next read or write will occur for channelId. Offset must be an integer
(which may be negative) and origin must be one of the following:
start The new access position will be offset bytes from the start of the underlying file or device.
current The new access position will be offset bytes from the current access position; a negative offset moves the access position back-
wards in the underlying file or device.
end The new access position will be offset bytes from the end of the file or device. A negative offset places the access position
before the end of file, and a positive offset places the access position after the end of file.
The origin argument defaults to start.
The command flushes all buffered output for the channel before the command returns, even if the channel is in nonblocking mode. It also
discards any buffered and unread input. This command returns an empty string. An error occurs if this command is applied to channels
whose underlying file or device does not support seeking.
Note that offset values are byte offsets, not character offsets. Both seek and tell operate in terms of bytes, not characters, unlike
read.
EXAMPLES
Read a file twice:
set f [open file.txt]
set data1 [read $f]
seek $f 0
set data2 [read $f]
close $f
# $data1 == $data2 if the file wasn't updated
Read the last 10 bytes from a file:
set f [open file.data]
# This is guaranteed to work with binary data but
# may fail with other encodings...
fconfigure $f -translation binary
seek $f -10 end
set data [read $f 10]
close $f
SEE ALSO
file(n), open(n), close(n), gets(n), tell(n), Tcl_StandardChannels(3)KEYWORDS
access position, file, seek
Tcl 8.1 seek(n)