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Full Discussion: Apologies from a newbie!
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Apologies from a newbie! Post 302336894 by speedfreak on Thursday 23rd of July 2009 04:43:13 AM
Old 07-23-2009
lathavim / pludi, thank you for your super-fast reply!
DukeNuke2 - apologies for not giving correct subject text!

lathavim / pludi - If I was running either of your commands manually it would work perfectly as I would be able to enter the name of the file I want to modify, however, remember my filename changes each month and I want to automate this.

Using either

sed -e '2,1d' file >file.tmp&&mv file.tmp file
or
perl -ni -e 'print if !/^\s*$/;' file.txt

requires me to enter the filename - but like I said, it changes each month and I want to automate the process. I need the script to actually fill in the filename for me. The file will always start with Myfile, and it will be the only file in the directory starting like this.

I had thought of using

ls Myfile* > nameholder

This creates a file called nameholder, within which is the name of the current months file to be modified.

If I could then somehow get the script to read that file and save the value as a parameter I could then use that parameter in the sed or perl command

sed -e '2,1d' $myfile >file.tmp&&mv file.tmp $myfile

Thanks for your excellent suggestions though.

Any thoughts?
 

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SQL::Translator::Parser::DBI(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation			 SQL::Translator::Parser::DBI(3pm)

NAME
SQL::Translator::Parser::DBI - "parser" for DBI handles SYNOPSIS
use DBI; use SQL::Translator; my $dbh = DBI->connect('dsn', 'user', 'pass', { RaiseError => 1, FetchHashKeyName => 'NAME_lc', } ); my $translator = SQL::Translator->new( parser => 'DBI', dbh => $dbh, ); Or: use SQL::Translator; my $translator = SQL::Translator->new( parser => 'DBI', parser_args => { dsn => 'dbi:mysql:FOO', db_user => 'guest', db_password => 'password', } ); DESCRIPTION
This parser accepts an open database handle (or the arguments to create one) and queries the database directly for the information. The following are acceptable arguments: o dbh An open DBI database handle. NB: Be sure to create the database with the "FetchHashKeyName => 'NAME_lc'" option as all the DBI parsers expect lowercased column names. o dsn The DSN to use for connecting to a database. o db_user The user name to use for connecting to a database. o db_password The password to use for connecting to a database. There is no need to specify which type of database you are querying as this is determined automatically by inspecting $dbh->{'Driver'}{'Name'}. If a parser exists for your database, it will be used automatically; if not, the code will fail automatically (and you can write the parser and contribute it to the project!). Currently parsers exist for the following databases: o MySQL o SQLite o Sybase o PostgreSQL (still experimental) Most of these parsers are able to query the database directly for the structure rather than parsing a text file. For large schemas, this is probably orders of magnitude faster than traditional parsing (which uses Parse::RecDescent, an amazing module but really quite slow). Though no Oracle parser currently exists, it would be fairly easy to query an Oracle database directly by using DDL::Oracle to generate a DDL for the schema and then using the normal Oracle parser on this. Perhaps future versions of SQL::Translator will include the ability to query Oracle directly and skip the parsing of a text file, too. AUTHOR
Ken Y. Clark <kclark@cpan.org>. SEE ALSO
DBI, SQL::Translator. perl v5.14.2 2012-05-01 SQL::Translator::Parser::DBI(3pm)
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