I am trying to write an awk program to reformat a data table and convert the date to julian time. I have all the individual steps working, but I am having some issues joing them into one program. Can anyone help me out? Here is my code so far:
# This is an awk program to convert the dates from... (4 Replies)
Can anyone help me with a shell script that can do the following:
I have a data in fasta format (first line is the header, followed by a sequence of characters).
>ALLLY
GGCCCCTCGAGCCTCGAACCGGAACCTCCAAATCCGAGACGCTCTGCTTATGAGGACCTC
GAAATATGCCGGCCAGTGAAAAAATCTTGTGGCTTTGAGGGCTTTTGGTTGGCCAGGGGC... (5 Replies)
I have a file which have data like
A.txt
a
1Jan I am in a1.
1Jan I was born.
2Jan I am here.
3Jan I am in a3.
b
1Jan I am in b1.
c
2Jan I am in c2.
d
2Jan I am in d2.
5jan I am in d5.
date in the file might be vary evertime. (9 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing just to share my appreciation for help I have received from this site in the past.
In a previous post Split File by Data Group I received a lot of help with a troublesome awk script to reformat some complicated data blocks. What I learned really came in hand recently when I... (1 Reply)
I am helping my wife set up a real estate site and I am starting to integrate MLS listings. We are using a HostGator level 5 VPS running CentOS and have full root and SSH access to the VPS.
Thus far I have automated the daily FTP download of listings from our MLS server using a little sh script.... (4 Replies)
Trace(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Trace(3pm)NAME
Devel::Trace - Print out each line before it is executed (like "sh -x")
SYNOPSIS
perl -d:Trace program
DESCRIPTION
If you run your program with "perl -d:Trace program", this module will print a message to standard error just before each line is executed.
For example, if your program looks like this:
#!/usr/bin/perl
print "Statement 1 at line 4
";
print "Statement 2 at line 5
";
print "Call to sub x returns ", &x(), " at line 6.
";
exit 0;
sub x {
print "In sub x at line 12.
";
return 13;
}
Then the "Trace" output will look like this:
>> ./test:4: print "Statement 1 at line 4
";
>> ./test:5: print "Statement 2 at line 5
";
>> ./test:6: print "Call to sub x returns ", &x(), " at line 6.
";
>> ./test:12: print "In sub x at line 12.
";
>> ./test:13: return 13;
>> ./test:8: exit 0;
This is something like the shell's "-x" option.
DETAILS
Inside your program, you can enable and disable tracing by doing
$Devel::Trace::TRACE = 1; # Enable
$Devel::Trace::TRACE = 0; # Disable
or
Devel::Trace::trace('on'); # Enable
Devel::Trace::trace('off'); # Disable
"Devel::Trace" exports the "trace" function if you ask it to:
import Devel::Trace 'trace';
Then if you want you just say
trace 'on'; # Enable
trace 'off'; # Disable
TODO
o You should be able to send the trace output to the filehandle of your choice.
o You should be able to specify the format of the output.
o You should be able to get the output into a string.
We'll see.
LICENSE
Devel::Trace 0.11 and its source code are hereby placed in the public domain.
Author
Mark-Jason Dominus (C<mjd-perl-trace@plover.com>), Plover Systems co. See the C<Devel::Trace.pm> Page at
http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/Trace for news and upgrades.
perl v5.14.2 2012-02-16 Trace(3pm)