I have one question regarding sed regexp (or any regexp in general),
I have some path like this
C:/Abc/def/ghi/jkl in a file file1
Now if i use following code
Now it give me following output
C:/Abc/def/ghi, which is fine
But i just want to know that in this sed code, why it is treating only last forward slash in file1 as the base for creating value of subsection (.*). i mean to say why it is treating C:/Abc/def/ghi as value of subsection. We are having 5 forward slashes in file1, why not it is picking upto C:/Abc/def.
Is that the property of regexp that if a sentence has five forward slashes & i use .*/.*, it will treat forward slash as last forward slash in file.
Can any one please suggest me some article/link to this question. I hope you are getting my question.
please help:
I want to add 1 space between string and numbers:
input file:
abcd12345
output file:
abcd 1234
The following sed command does not work:
sed 's/\(+\)\(+\)/\1 \2/' file
Any ideas, please
Andy (2 Replies)
the sed command:
sed 's/^*//' file
does not work on HP-UX :-( but it works fine on Linux,
content of file:
<tab><tab>hello
output should be:
hello
Any ideas??
Thank you
Andy (8 Replies)
Basically it should identify what ever is in between /*< >*/ (tags) and replace dbname ending with (.) with the words in between the tags
i.e.
DELETE FROM /*<workDB>*/epd_test./*<multi>*//*<version>*/epd_tbl1 ALL; into
DELETE FROM... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am not that good with reg exp and sed. But I was just looking at something the other day and came across a situation.
When I ran the below command:
echo "123 word" | sed 's/*/(&)/'
the op was:
(123) word
But when I ran:
echo "123 word" | sed 's/*/(&)/g'
the o/p was:
(123)... (4 Replies)
Dear all
i have the code which print 1 line of context before and after regexp, with line number
sed -n -e '/regexp/{=;x;1!p;g;$!N;p;D;}' -e h
the code work well but any one can tell me what each letter mean {=;x;1!p;g;$!N;p;D;}
also how i can print 2 line before and onle line after ... (2 Replies)
Dealing with Linux servers
script would be in korn or bash shell syntax
file is /etc/fstab
I want to insert something if regex is matched to all matched lines in the /etc/fstab file and print out entire /etc/fstab file with the changes
example
58.228.111.111:/my/file/system... (5 Replies)
Hi everyone, I would really appreciate any help I could get on the following topic.
I am not very familiar with reg expressions nor with sed, I just know the basic uses. What I am trying to do is the following: I have a huge text file where I would like to replace all occurnces of a certain... (13 Replies)
I need help with a regexp to find out the ip address which can possibly be present in a URL.
The URLs can be in any of the following form
<domain>?a=12345&d=somestring1
<domain>?c=10.10.10.100&d=somestring1
<domain>?a=12345&b=somestring1&c=10.1.2.4d=somestring2... (3 Replies)
G'day,
Here's a teaser for a sed guru, which I surely am not one, as even my
basic sed skills are rusted from years of not practising ... lol
Ok ... we have a string of digits such as:
632413741610252847552619172459483022433027602515212950543016701812771409213148672112
we want it split... (9 Replies)
OFF 00280456 - 2014|1|2020_STATUS|GROUP_NAME|SUBGROUP_NAME|CLASS_NAME|GROUP_ID|SUBGROUP_ID
I have above header in file. I need to replace 2020_STATUS with STATUS.
2020_STATUS is not always same but the column name will have STATUS all of the time. For instance column name might be 2019_STATUS... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jmadhams
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
pdl::char
Char(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Char(3pm)NAME
PDL::Char -- PDL subclass which allows reading and writing of fixed-length character strings as byte PDLs
SYNOPSIS
use PDL;
use PDL::Char;
my $pchar = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$pchar->setstr(1,0,'foo');
print $pchar; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'foo' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
print $pchar->atstr(2,0);
# Prints:
# ghi
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of PDL allows one to manipulate PDLs of 'byte' type as if they were made of fixed length strings, not just numbers.
This type of behavior is useful when you want to work with charactar grids. The indexing is done on a string level and not a character
level for the 'setstr' and 'atstr' commands.
This module is in particular useful for writing NetCDF files that include character data using the PDL::NetCDF module.
FUNCTIONS
new
Function to create a byte PDL from a string, list of strings, list of list of strings, etc.
# create a new PDL::Char from a perl array of strings
$strpdl = PDL::Char->new( ['abc', 'def', 'ghij'] );
# Convert a PDL of type 'byte' to a PDL::Char
$strpdl1 = PDL::Char->new (sequence (byte, 4, 5)+99);
$pdlchar3d = PDL::Char->new([['abc','def','ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']]);
string
Function to print a character PDL (created by 'char') in a pretty format.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
# 'string' is overloaded to the "" operator, so:
# print $char;
# should have the same effect.
setstr
Function to set one string value in a character PDL. The input position is the position of the string, not a character in the string. The
first dimension is assumed to be the length of the string.
The input string will be null-padded if the string is shorter than the first dimension of the PDL. It will be truncated if it is longer.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$char->setstr(0,1, 'foobar');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
$char->setstr(2,1, 'f');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'f'] -> note that this 'f' is stored "f "
# ]
atstr
Function to fetch one string value from a PDL::Char type PDL, given a position within the PDL. The input position of the string, not a
character in the string. The length of the input string is the implied first dimension.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char->atstr(0,1);
# Prints:
# jkl
perl v5.14.2 2011-03-30 Char(3pm)