Hi All,
I have did a search in the whole forum about Find, but get too many results, so I hope my message not annoying anyone.
How do I do a find for a specific file in the whole machine?
I am hoping for something like this.
find . -name
thanks (11 Replies)
------------------------------
$x=" hi";
$tabspace=0;
while ($x =~ /\t/g )
{
$tabspace++;
}
print $tabspace;
---------------------------------
1.)when i tried it without "g" ($x = ~/\t/ )... when i run the script it utilizes around 95% cpu and system hangs and i did "End process"... (0 Replies)
I'm looking for a script or program that would allow me to pass a pattern to it and give me locations on where text appears in a file. I wish it was that straight forward (I would use egrep or something)
Say I have the word in my text file "SUDAN" but my user does a search for "SUDANESE". Grep... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have a really, what I hope is, simple question.
I'm looking for a simple way to see whether a file exists or not and then perform an action based on whether it exists or not. An example of what I tried is as follows:
if
then {
echo "File mysql exists"
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a log file containing data on emails sent. Looks a bit like this for one email:
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="UTF-8"
Date: 12 Jun 2008 14:04:59 +0100
From: from@email.com
Subject: xcf4564xzcv
To: recip@email.co.uk
Size = 364 Jun 12 14:04 smtp_234sldfh.tmp
I need to... (5 Replies)
Hi ,
I want to write a simple script.
I have two files
file1:
BCSpeciality
Backend
CB
CBAPQualDisp
CBCimsVFTRCK
CBDSNQualDisp
CBDefault
CBDisney
CBFaxMCGen
CBMCGeneral
CBMCQualDisp
file2:
CSpeciality
Backend (8 Replies)
Hello all!
This is my first post and I'm very new to programming. I would like help creating a simple perl or bash script that I will be using in my work as a junior bioinformatician.
Essentially, I would like to take a tab-delimted or .csv text with 3 columns and write them to a "3D" matrix:
... (16 Replies)
Hi everyone. I've been reading around and am a little bit overwhelmed, hoping to find a kind soul out there to hold my hand through writing my first script. This need has emerged at work and I haven't much experience writing shell scripts, but this is a problem we have with a production environment... (13 Replies)
Hello guys, im new to to unix/linux
i have a text file like this:
person1@test.com iisiiasasas
person2@test.com 123w2 3233
sajsja person3@test.com jsajjsa
sajsjasaj person4@test.com
I want to extract only e-mail address and get rid of all other stuff, i want an output like this
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: RazorMX
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
pdl::char
Char(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Char(3pm)NAME
PDL::Char -- PDL subclass which allows reading and writing of fixed-length character strings as byte PDLs
SYNOPSIS
use PDL;
use PDL::Char;
my $pchar = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$pchar->setstr(1,0,'foo');
print $pchar; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'foo' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
print $pchar->atstr(2,0);
# Prints:
# ghi
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of PDL allows one to manipulate PDLs of 'byte' type as if they were made of fixed length strings, not just numbers.
This type of behavior is useful when you want to work with charactar grids. The indexing is done on a string level and not a character
level for the 'setstr' and 'atstr' commands.
This module is in particular useful for writing NetCDF files that include character data using the PDL::NetCDF module.
FUNCTIONS
new
Function to create a byte PDL from a string, list of strings, list of list of strings, etc.
# create a new PDL::Char from a perl array of strings
$strpdl = PDL::Char->new( ['abc', 'def', 'ghij'] );
# Convert a PDL of type 'byte' to a PDL::Char
$strpdl1 = PDL::Char->new (sequence (byte, 4, 5)+99);
$pdlchar3d = PDL::Char->new([['abc','def','ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']]);
string
Function to print a character PDL (created by 'char') in a pretty format.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
# 'string' is overloaded to the "" operator, so:
# print $char;
# should have the same effect.
setstr
Function to set one string value in a character PDL. The input position is the position of the string, not a character in the string. The
first dimension is assumed to be the length of the string.
The input string will be null-padded if the string is shorter than the first dimension of the PDL. It will be truncated if it is longer.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$char->setstr(0,1, 'foobar');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
$char->setstr(2,1, 'f');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'f'] -> note that this 'f' is stored "f "
# ]
atstr
Function to fetch one string value from a PDL::Char type PDL, given a position within the PDL. The input position of the string, not a
character in the string. The length of the input string is the implied first dimension.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char->atstr(0,1);
# Prints:
# jkl
perl v5.14.2 2011-03-30 Char(3pm)