first off :
change the shebang to be on the FIRST line of the perl script, in the first lefthand column.
Second: If that does not work, then
The which command tells you where perl lives. Change the first line to point to that:
I am making up something here, use what your system says:
I am trying to run the following code from a script file but it complains that syntax of (both instances of) grep is wrong.
When I copy and paste it to the terminal, it is OK. Any idea what the problem might be?
set i = `grep -c #define flags.h`
while ($i>20)
@ i--
my func (`cat... (4 Replies)
without using ls, just using echo so purely pattern matching
I can say echo */ <-- lists directories
but how would I match files? surely something like *!/ or * but neither work ?
it seems like there isn't much that I can put in but surely i should be able to put any ascii... (1 Reply)
completion-ignore-case option doesn't work in my version:
/home/user $ echo $BASH_VERSION
3.2.48(1)-release
/home/user $ ls -l *
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user 0 2009-10-18 00:09 somefile
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user 0 2009-10-18 00:09 Somefile
/home/user $ set completion-ignore-case on
But when I... (2 Replies)
I am writing perl script to configure Cisco device but Variables inside Net::Telnet::Cisco Module doesn't work and passed to device without resolving.
Please advise.
here is a sample of script:
use Net::Telnet::Cisco;
$device = "10.14.199.1";
($o1, $o2, $o3, $o4) = split(/\./,$device);... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to write a script that checks gvfs to see if a mount exists so I can run it from network-manager's status hooks. I thought I'd pipe the output of gvfs-mount -l to grep for the particular mounts I care about. When I do this in a bash script:
cmnd="gvfs-mount -l | grep -i... (4 Replies)
Hello Friends,
My bash script is like this
#!/bin/bash
# request Bourne shell as shell for job
#$ -S /bin/bash
# assume current working directory as paths
#$ -cwd
#$ -N rsync-copy
#
# print date and time
date
rsync -rltD --progress "ssh -i /home/myname/.ssh/id_rsa"... (4 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I've an issue trying to soustracte two dates, e.g:
d1=$(date -d "Nov 18, 2017" +%s)
d2=$(date +%s) # Today we are 2017-11-16
echo "$(( (d1 - d2) / 86400 ))"
Output:
1
I don't understand why it doesn't work. for me, it should give "18 - 16 = 2".
Much appreciated... (1 Reply)
Bash version 4.4.20 / Ubuntu 16.0.4
Hello,
I tried to write a script that gathers some data and passes them to an executable.
The executed application answers with an error. The echo output in the script returns correct values.
If I copy/paste the last echo command, it get's executed... (2 Replies)
I have the following code:
#!/bin/csh
clear
set cloud_file="/home/labs/koren/davidsr/general_scripts/MFP_10_PP_Parmas.txt" # to fill
set mie_tables_dir='/home/labs/koren/davidsr/SHDOM_MAIN/MIE_TABLES/non_polo_wave_0.7_water_50R_s0.5_e25_max_70.mie' # to fill
set prp_dir='${pp_dir}/pp_prp/'... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: student_wiz
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
yapp
YAPP(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation YAPP(1p)NAME
yapp - A perl frontend to the Parse::Yapp module
SYNOPSYS
yapp [options] grammar[.yp]
yapp -V
yapp -h
DESCRIPTION
yapp is a frontend to the Parse::Yapp module, which lets you compile Parse::Yapp grammar input files into Perl LALR(1) OO parser modules.
OPTIONS
Options, as of today, are all optionals :-)
-v Creates a file grammar.output describing your parser. It will show you a summary of conflicts, rules, the DFA (Deterministic Finite
Automaton) states and overall usage of the parser.
-s Create a standalone module in which the driver is included. Note that if you have more than one parser module called from a program,
to have it standalone, you need this option only for one of your parser module.
-n Disable source file line numbering embedded in your parser module. I don't know why one should need it, but it's there.
-m module
Gives your parser module the package name (or name space or module name or class name or whatever-you-call-it) of module. It defaults
to grammar
-o outfile
The compiled output file will be named outfile for your parser module. It defaults to grammar.pm or, if you specified the option -m
A::Module::Name (see below), to Name.pm.
-t filename
The -t filename option allows you to specify a file which should be used as template for generating the parser output. The default is
to use the internal template defined in Parse::Yapp::Output.pm. For how to write your own template and which substitutions are
available, have a look to the module Parse::Yapp::Output.pm : it should be obvious.
-b shebang
If you work on systems that understand so called shebangs, and your generated parser is directly an executable script, you can specifie
one with the -b option, ie:
yapp -b '/usr/local/bin/perl -w' -o myscript.pl myscript.yp
This will output a file called myscript.pl whose very first line is:
#!/usr/local/bin/perl -w
The argument is mandatory, but if you specify an empty string, the value of $Config{perlpath} will be used instead.
grammar
The input grammar file. If no suffix is given, and the file does not exists, an attempt to open the file with a suffix of .yp is tried
before exiting.
-V Display current version of Parse::Yapp and gracefully exits.
-h Display the usage screen.
BUGS
None known now :-)
AUTHOR
Francois Desarmenien <francois@fdesar.net>
COPYRIGHT
(c) Copyright 1998-1999 Francois Desarmenien, all rights reserved. See Parse::Yapp(3) for legal use and distribution rights
SEE ALSO Parse::Yapp(3)Perl(1)yacc(1)bison(1)perl v5.10.1 2001-02-11 YAPP(1p)