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Full Discussion: Delimiter count in a string.
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Delimiter count in a string. Post 302249005 by radoulov on Monday 20th of October 2008 10:17:22 AM
Old 10-20-2008
Or:

Code:
string=SYS_NAME-123-S5-2008-10-20.LOG ifs="$IFS" IFS=-
set -- $string; count=$(($#-1));IFS="$ifs"

The variable count contains the number of -'s.

With zsh:

Code:
count=$((${#${(s.-.)string}}-1))


Last edited by radoulov; 10-20-2008 at 11:26 AM..
 

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rrpc_inq_interfaces(3ncs)												 rrpc_inq_interfaces(3ncs)

Name
       rrpc_inq_interfaces - obtain a list of the interfaces that a server exports

Syntax
       #include <idl/c/rrpc.h>

       void rrpc_$inq_interfaces(handle, max_ifs, ifs, l_if, status)
       handle_t handle;
       unsigned long max_ifs;
       rrpc_$interface_vec_t ifs[];
       unsigned long *l_if;
       status_$t *status;

Arguments
       handle	      An RPC handle.

       max_ifs	      The maximum number of elements in the array of interface specifiers.

       ifs	      An array of rpc_$if_spec_t.

       l_if	      The index of the last element in the returned array.

       status	      The  completion status.  If the completion status returned in is equal to status_$ok , then the routine that supplied it was
		      successful.

Description
       The routine returns an array of RPC interface specifiers.

Restrictions
       On the client side, because of the way the calls are defined and implemented in the run-time library you  must  explicitly  call  into  the
       entry point vector table for the interface to send an request across the network. The following is an example of a call that works
	 (*rrpc_$client_epv.rrpc_$inq_interfaces)(handle,
		    (unsigned long) max_ifs, ifs, &l_if, &status);
       The server side stub routines call the entry point on behalf of the client.  The results of the call are then passed back to the client.

Files
See Also
       intro(3ncs)

															 rrpc_inq_interfaces(3ncs)
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