07-18-2009
Sorry about that. Seems like no one is up to it, I have till tomorrow 11:59pm so....bump please? =(
I'm tired of thinking by myself.
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Is there one out there that supports Perl/Tk ??? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: perleo
5 Replies
2. Programming
Hey Im starting out in C just recently and Im needing a string that converts binary to text, The only way i know of doing this without knowledge of C entirely. Is Making a sorta of library of the entire alphabet in binary for the program to select the text from it to display a sentence. If that... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: 01doublehelix10
2 Replies
3. UNIX and Linux Applications
cld someone suggest a good web to wap convertor (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: viapillai
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I have a script that finds the application logs from the previous day and sends it to another server via ftp.
The code is something like this:
yest_date=`TZ=CST+24 date "+%b %d"`
logdir=/app/logs
logs=app*.log
tmpdir=/tmp
cd $logdir
for i in `ls -1 $logs`
do
chkstr=`ls -1l $i | grep... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tatchel
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi ,I have seen this comverters before ,but I was searching today and I can not find them .Is anybody used them before .Any recomendations
Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lio123
5 Replies
CALENDAR(1) General Commands Manual CALENDAR(1)
NAME
calendar - reminder service
SYNOPSIS
calendar [ - ]
DESCRIPTION
Calendar consults the file `calendar' in the current directory and prints out lines that contain today's or tomorrow's date anywhere in the
line. Most reasonable month-day dates such as `Dec. 7,' `december 7,' `12/7,' etc., are recognized, but not `7 December' or `7/12'. If
you give the month as ``*'' with a date, i.e. ``* 1'', that day in any month will do. On weekends `tomorrow' extends through Monday.
When an argument is present, calendar does its job for every user who has a file `calendar' in his login directory and sends him any posi-
tive results by mail(1). Normally this is done daily in the wee hours under control of cron(8).
The file `calendar' is first run through the ``C'' preprocessor, /lib/cpp, to include any other calendar files specified with the usual
``#include'' syntax. Included calendars will usually be shared by all users, maintained and documented by the local administration.
FILES
calendar
/usr/libexec/calendar to figure out today's and tomorrow's dates
/etc/passwd
/tmp/cal*
/lib/cpp, egrep, sed, mail as subprocesses
SEE ALSO
at(1), cron(8), mail(1)
BUGS
Calendar's extended idea of `tomorrow' doesn't account for holidays.
7th Edition October 21, 1996 CALENDAR(1)