Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: unary operator expected
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting unary operator expected Post 302295011 by Satyak on Friday 6th of March 2009 10:12:38 AM
Old 03-06-2009
Java unary operator expected

hi

i am trying to compare a value with value 50. but i am getting
"[: -lt: unary operator expected"

I am using

Code:
 if [ $j -lt 50 ]
then 
   echo "------------"

fi

please help

thanks in advance
Satya
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

unary operator expected error

Hi I am doing a script like if then echo "table name dosent exist" exit fi the problem is if $table_name is null then i am getting the error Please help me Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ssuresh1999
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

[: =: unary operator expected

HI, while running a script, I got the below mentioned error. /bin/sh: line10 : supportedMozillaVersion() { case "$*" in *rv:1.*) return 0;; *rv:.*) return 0;; *rv:*) return 1;; Mozilla\ 1.*) return 0;; Mozilla\ .*) return 0;; *) return 1;; esac } supportedFirefoxVersion() { case... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhag281
7 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

unary operator expected

Im trying to fix my /etc/weekly that rotates various logs however it does them no matter what filesize they are and i want them to only do it if there file size exceeds 2M or something. So I'm playing with a script to get the filesize using a ls -l command which works and puts the value into a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: timgolding
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

line 5: [: -gt: unary operator expected

Hello all, :confused: I am not getting this error. Pls help me. ./construct_operon.sh: line 5: #!/bin/bash # Construct Operons using gene pairs. rm -rf operons_result lines=`awk 'END {print NR}' ecoli_operons` while ; do head -1 ecoli_operons | awk '{print $1"\n"$2}' > pattern ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: admax
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Error : -ne: unary operator expected

find . -name "*.*"|xargs grep WT:DBF_WL>> $F Wfexist=`cat $F|grep $i` echo $Wfexist if ; then echo $Wfexist echo "Workflow Exist" else touch $O chmod 777 $O echo $Wfexist echo $WfExist >> $O fi I am getting the error that -ne: unary operator expected in the line with red... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ritu.s
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Problem unary operator expected

I get the following error ./get_NE05: line 42: while do echo ${STRING_NAME} J=1 if ; then EXT=0$I else EXT=$I fi while do echo $I-$J #calculating last occurrence OCCURRENCE=`grep -io "${STRING_NAME}"... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: f_o_555
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

unary operator expected

i=0 while Shell script reports an error "unary operator expected" pointing the above line. $i by default is 0 and holds integer value and $buf is also holding integer value. Please can some one let me know what is missing. Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sunrexstar
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

: unary operator expected

Hiya all, Why do I get a :unary operator expected when I try to put a condition statement in my shell script (sh) like so and how to fix? if ; then echo "say hello" else echo "don't say hello" fi ? It seems if the script receives an argument it works but if I don't put an... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cyberfrog
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

[: -gt: unary operator expected

Hi I have problem with my script. I dont now why but i don't change anything and script stop working. this is my code: #!/bin/sh for i in `ps -A | grep pocron.sh | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}'` do COUNT=$((COUNT+1)) done ostatnie_wykonanie=`cat porader.log`... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fotex
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unary operator expected

In all my Googling, this usually happens when someone is comparing a variable, and that variable is unset. That doesn't appear to be the case for me... #!/bin/bash -x while read line do f=$(echo $line | tr -s ' ' | cut -d' ' -f 3) echo $f if then echo "This... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jnojr
2 Replies
TAPECALC(1)						      General Commands Manual						       TAPECALC(1)

NAME
tapecalc - full-screen editing calculator USAGE
tapecalc [options] [file-specifications] SYNOPSIS
Tapecalc is a fixed-point calculator that operates as a full-screen editor. DESCRIPTION
Tapecalc performs fixed-point computation. It is designed for use as a checkbook or expense-account balancing tool. Tapecalc maintains a running result for each operation. You may scroll to any position in the expression list and modify the list. Enter data by typing numbers (with optional decimal point), separated by operators. An output transcript may be saved and reloaded for further editing. Scripts are loaded from left to right (with the "output" processed first). OPTIONS
Command line options of tapecalc are: -h Prints the list of options. -i interval Sets compounding interval for interest computation. -o script Specify file in which to save output transcript. -p num Sets precision (number of digits after the decimal place). OPERATIONS
Computations: The operators are all single-character: + begins an addition - begins a subtraction ~ negates the result * begins a multiplication / begins a division % begins an interest computation (uses interval): rate=number. $ begins a sales-tax computation: rate=number. ( opening parenthesis. This may enclose a unary '-', more parentheses, or data (implicit unary '+'). ) closing parenthesis, expects another operator, not data. = flushes out the current number, forces re-computation of the running result. A space flushes out the current number-input, and (by default) sets the next operator to be the same as the current one. You may repeat the last arithmetic operation of any type: a repeats the last '+' (default 0). s repeats the last '-' (default 0). n repeats the last '~'. m repeats the last '*' (default 1). d repeats the last '/' (default 1). i repeats the last '%' (default 4). t repeats the last '$' (default 4). You may toggle the prefix operator of any number by typing a single character: A toggles the operator to '+'. S toggles the operator to '-'. N toggles the operator to '~'. M toggles the operator to '*'. D toggles the operator to '/'. I toggles the operator to '%'. T toggles the operator to '$'. Editing: As you enter data, you may edit it. A backspace deletes the last digit of the current number (if it is visible). Use the arrow keys or vi-style 'h' and 'l' to move left and right within the line. Other editing commands include u undoes the last x/X command (restricted to restoring the current data only). x deletes the current data. If the data is null, deletes the following line. X deletes the current data. If the data is null, deletes the preceding line and moves up. o opens a new line after the current line. O opens a new line before the current line. # edit the associated comment. An "open" permits you to insert a new operator and data into the expression list. You may type an operator character (e.g., '+'), and continue with the new data, or an operator-repeat (e.g., 'A'). In either case, you may edit the new data, just as you would the old data. A 'u' (or other toggle, such as 'o', 'O', or 'q') typed after an open will undo the open (and close it). Scrolling/cursor movement: H move to the top line on the screen. M move to the middle line on the screen. L move to the last line on the screen CTL/F scroll forward one screen. CTL/B scroll backward one screen. j move forward one line. k move backward one line. z<CR> move the current line to the top of the screen. z. move the current line to the middle of the screen. z- move the current line to the bottom of the screen. Like vi, tapecalc allows you to jump to a particular line with a ":" command :$ jumps to the last entry :1 jumps to the first entry. Scripts: Transcript files are formatted to permit line-oriented entries: <operator><value><tab><ignored><tab># comment The transcripts saved by tapecalc contain the running result in the "ignored" part. To exit without saving a transcript, type 'Q'. A nor- mal exit, by typing 'q', saves the list of operators, data (and running result) in the specified file. You can read and write scripts without leaving tapecalc. reads a script at the current entry :e file clears the current script and reads a script from the file. :f shows the current script name. :r file :w file writes a script to the specified file. ENVIRONMENT
Tapecalc runs in a portable UNIX(R) environment. FILES
Tapecalc is a single binary module, with a help file tapecalc.hlp installed in the same directory. FUTURE WORK
It would be nice to be able to change the precision within the program. In particular, the interest and sales tax computations would be more useful if their precision was independent of the running total. AUTHOR
Thomas Dickey SEE ALSO
wc (1), vi (1) TAPECALC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy