For what it's worth, I've found the awk method very handy. As an unnecessarily complex example:
It makes it very easy to build a formula and feed numbers into it. For example, suppose I typo'ed and want the cosine of 35 instead of 30. I just arrow up, change the 30 to 35, and I'm done. Or, alternately, ^30^35. My work involves loads of math geekery, so this has become very handy.
Alright, umm i cant get this to work.
im looking at some example and a book i have.
when i try to compile my program i get an error message.
ld: 0711-317 ERROR: Undefined symbol: .sqrt
ld: 0711-345 Use the -bloadmap or -bnoquiet option to obtain more information. I did #include<math.h> after my... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I wrote this script
awk -F"\t" '{if ((($1 == 586) || ($1 == 68030)) && (($2/1024) < 512)) print $0"\t"(512-($2/1024))"\t"(512-($2/1024))/256}' pcs.txt
But I want from the calculation in red to get rid of the decimal part. Like instead of 1.75 to keep only 1.Please somebody tell me what... (4 Replies)
Hi, I got an easy problem for you but really difficult for me 'cause I am pretty new to this field
I got header file <math.h> included in my .c file , then I write the code as below:
k = sqrt(i); /* both variables k and i are int */
then I cc temp.c
it says like this
undefined... (4 Replies)
I want to calculate secant method using C language
That is a program---->
#include<stdio.h>
#include<math.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
main()
{
double fx(double x);
double x0,x1,x2,f0,f1,f2,err;
int n,i;
printf("\n\n f(x) =x*x*x-5*x-7");
printf("\n\nEnter an interval in"
... (4 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
The problem? I hope I fill this out correctly. I have a program that runs like a cash register. It works and... (6 Replies)
I am trying to do some math, so that I can compare the average of six numbers to a variable.
Here is what it looks like (note that when I divide really big numbers, it isn't a real number):
$ tail -n 6 named.stats | awk -F\, '{print$1}'
1141804
1140566
1139429
1134210
1084682
895045... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I am new to PERL scripts, and i have made my first script which i am posting here.
This math tool performs all basic arithmatic functions.
#!/usr/bin/perl
print "\t----------Welcome to Maths Tool-----------\n";
do
{
print "Enter your choice :";
print... (2 Replies)
I am struggling with scripting this challenge a friend and I have.
You have file1 and its contents is a single number
you have file 2 and its contents are a different number
you want to add file1 to file2 and have the output be put into file3 (3 Replies)
i have file (my_file.txt) that looks like this:
000000000000010000
000000000000010000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
000000000000005000
all said and one, it should look... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: lawsongeek
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
config::general::interpolated
General::Interpolated(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation General::Interpolated(3pm)NAME
Config::General::Interpolated - Parse variables within Config files
SYNOPSIS
use Config::General;
$conf = new Config::General(
-ConfigFile => 'configfile',
-InterPolateVars => 1
);
DESCRIPTION
This is an internal module which makes it possible to interpolate Perl style variables in your config file (i.e. $variable or
"${variable}").
Normally you don't call it directly.
VARIABLES
Variables can be defined everywhere in the config and can be used afterwards as the value of an option. Variables cannot be used as keys or
as part of keys.
If you define a variable inside a block or a named block then it is only visible within this block or within blocks which are defined
inside this block. Well - let's take a look to an example:
# sample config which uses variables
basedir = /opt/ora
user = t_space
sys = unix
<table intern>
instance = INTERN
owner = $user # "t_space"
logdir = $basedir/log # "/opt/ora/log"
sys = macos
<procs>
misc1 = ${sys}_${instance} # macos_INTERN
misc2 = $user # "t_space"
</procs>
</table>
This will result in the following structure:
{
'basedir' => '/opt/ora',
'user' => 't_space'
'sys' => 'unix',
'table' => {
'intern' => {
'sys' => 'macos',
'logdir' => '/opt/ora/log',
'instance' => 'INTERN',
'owner' => 't_space',
'procs' => {
'misc1' => 'macos_INTERN',
'misc2' => 't_space'
}
}
}
As you can see, the variable sys has been defined twice. Inside the <procs> block a variable ${sys} has been used, which then were
interpolated into the value of sys defined inside the <table> block, not the sys variable one level above. If sys were not defined inside
the <table> block then the "global" variable sys would have been used instead with the value of "unix".
Variables inside double quotes will be interpolated, but variables inside single quotes will not interpolated. This is the same behavior as
you know of Perl itself.
In addition you can surround variable names with curly braces to avoid misinterpretation by the parser.
SEE ALSO
Config::General
AUTHORS
Thomas Linden <tlinden |AT| cpan.org>
Autrijus Tang <autrijus@autrijus.org>
Wei-Hon Chen <plasmaball@pchome.com.tw>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 by Wei-Hon Chen <plasmaball@pchome.com.tw>. Copyright 2002-2010 by Thomas Linden <tlinden |AT| cpan.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
VERSION
2.14
perl v5.10.1 2010-12-01 General::Interpolated(3pm)