Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: How to know the file type
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to know the file type Post 302288378 by ynilesh on Tuesday 17th of February 2009 05:21:51 AM
Old 02-17-2009
file {filename}
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

FILE data type

Hi all, Can anyone tell me a little about the datatype FILE, which represents stream. What does its structure look like, and in which header file is it defined and so on... Ex : FILE *fp ; fp = fopen("filename", "w") ; (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: milhan
6 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Identify type of file

hi all, i have the next question: how can i identify the type of a file? . I'm working in Unix (Solaris 5.7) and i would like identify if a file is or not is a "flat file". I need have a program what separates the flat file in a directory, and the excel file in another directory. I must get... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DebianJ
1 Replies

3. HP-UX

more than one fs type on the same file system

hi is it possible to have more than one file system types on the same file system. if yes then how do we do it, can veritas be used to achieve this (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: livemyway
1 Replies

4. Programming

file type

Hi Everyone! I am working on a c program which displays all the directories and files under each directory. I want to know what kind of file each is. Like, is the file an ascii text file or english text or a c file. if it is an executable, is it an binary file or a shell script. I was told to... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: vijlak
12 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

String type to date type

Can one string type variable changed into the date type variable. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rinku
1 Replies

6. Programming

array type has incomplete element type

Dear colleagues, One of my friend have a problem with c code. While compiling a c program it displays a message like "array type has incomplete element type". Any body can provide a solution for it. Jaganadh.G (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jaganadh
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

use perl to get file type ?

Can anybody please tell me how can I determine whether a file is SYMBOLIC LINK, using the stat() function ? So far I have this: my @attrs = stat($fileName); my $mode = $attrs; What next ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: the_learner
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

[solved] File type error (not a regular file)

Hi friend, i have written script as below to check the file existance. but i got error path="/k/p1100/users/jewel/Output" FILENAME=`ls -lrt $path/*HT|tail -1|cut -d "/" -f 8` if ; then echo "$FILENAME is available " chmod 755 $path/$FILENAME /usr/bin/scp... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jewel
0 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script to read file and check file type

Hi, I have a file with few values in it. I need script help to read file line by line and check: 1/if it's a file (with extension eg .java .css .jar etc ) or 2/if it's a file without extension and treat it as a directory and then check if the directory exists in working copy else create one... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: iaav
6 Replies
RDSWAP(1)						      General Commands Manual							 RDSWAP(1)

["NAME"]
       rdswap - a multi-language RD documents support tool

["SYNOPSIS"]
       rdswap [ -h | -v ] filename ...

["DESCRIPTION"]
       This tool is written to support you to write multi-language documents using the Ruby-Document-Format (RD).

       The idea for such a tool was originated by Minero Aoki, how has thought about, how to make life easier for developers who have to write and
       maintain scripts in more than one language.

       You have to specify at least two filenames on the command line. One containing the Ruby script, the second containing a translated  RD.	If
       the  script  does  not  end  with `.rb', it has to be the first filename mentioned on the command line! In opposition, all files containing
       translations must not ending with `.rb'! They should use a extension that describes the language. So that would give us the following  pic-
       ture:

	      o sample.rb : Script contains the original documentation.

	      o sample.jp : Documentation written in Japanese.

	      o sample.de : Translation to German.

       The  tool doesn't care about the language extensions. You can name them as you like! So the file containing the Japanese translation above,
       could also be names e.g. `sample.japan' or even `japantranslation.japan'.

       For every translation file, a new file will be created. The name is build from the script filename plus the language extension. So  regard-
       ing the example above, following files would be created:

	      o sample.rb.jp

	      o sample.rb.de

       or, given the alternative translation filename as mentioned above...

	      o sample.rb.japan

   ["How does it work?"]
       The  contents  of all files will be split into source and RD blocks. The source of the translation files, will be discarded! Every RD block
       may be of a certain type. The type will be taken from the contents directly following the `=begin' on the same line. If	there  is  only  a
       lonely `=begin' on a line by itself, the type of the block is `nil'. That means in
	   # File sample.rd
	   :
	   =begin
	    bla bla
	   =end
	   :
	   =begin whatever or not
	    blub blub
	   =end
	   :

       the first block would be of type `nil' and the second one of type `whatever or not'.

       Block  types  are  important for the translation. If a source will be generated from a script and a translation file, only these blocks are
       taken from the translation files, that comes in the right sequence and contains the same type as the block in the script! For example:
	   # File sample.rb
	   :
	   =begin gnark
	    Some comment
	   =end
	   :
	   =begin
	    block 2
	   =end
	   :
	   =begin
	    block 3
	   =end
	   :

	   # File sample.de
	   :
	   =begin
	    Block zwei
	   =end
	   :
	   =begin
	    Block drei
	   =end
	   :

       Here, the first block of `sample.rb' will *not* be translated, as there is no translation block with that type in sample.de! So	the  first
       block  would  be  inserted as-it-is into the translated script. The blocks afterwards, however, are translated as the block type does match
       (it is `nil' there).

       Attention: In a translation file, a second block will only be used, if a first one was already used (matched). A third block will  only	be
       used, if a second one was used already!

       That  means,  if the first block of `sample.de' would be of type e.g. `Never match', then no block would ever be taken to replace anyone of
       `sample.rb'.

   ["OPTIONS"]
       ["-h"]
	      shows this help text.

       ["-v"]
	      shows some more text during processing.

       ["filename"]
	      means a file, that contains RD and/or Ruby code.

   ["EXAMPLES"]
	   rdswap -v sample.rb sample.ja sample.de
	   rdswap -v sample.ja sample.rb sample.de
	   rdswap -v sample.ja sample.de sample.rb
	   rdswap -v sample.??

   ["AUTHORS"]
       Clemens Hintze <c.hintze@gmx.net>.

								     June 2012								 RDSWAP(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:33 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy