Please help. This simple problem is really stumping me.
Is there are way to find absolute pathnames for all files on your system that are longer than 100 characters?
I'm using bash shell to attempt it, but have come up with nothing so far.
I appreciate any help offered.
Nauty (2 Replies)
I am trying to find all files in a directory whose name has a real number larger then the number I am looking for.
For example:
.
|-- delta.1.5.sql
|-- delta.2.1.sql
|-- delta.2.2.sql
|-- delta.2.3.sql
|-- delta.2.4.sql
`-- delta.2.5.sql
I know my database is at 2.2 so I want an... (2 Replies)
as we can find file greater than 1 MB with find command as:
find /dir -name '*' -size +1M
find /dir/* -name '*' -size +1M
but wats its doing is , its finding files only in current directory not in sub-directories. i want files from sub-directories too.
Please help... Thanx in... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have been trying to find someone with this similar problem but I was out of luck.
So I have a file that has two columns that look like this (for example):
10 20
40 50
45 60
90 130
So column 1 is start and column 2 is stop but what I want to do is find whats not represented... (4 Replies)
I'm doing a little work on assessing and improving server stability. As part of that, we're reviewing the contents of /proc/slabinfo. We see that sometimes a certain metric-- say, buffer_head-- spike prior to server instability. We're interested in learning what contributes to that as we trace... (0 Replies)
Hello, I was looking for a way to select between the repeated entries (column1) based on the values of absolute values of column 3 (larger value). For example if the same gene id has FC value -2 and 1, I should get the output as -2. Kindly help.
GeneID Description FC ... (2 Replies)
data.txt
August 09 17:16 2013
August 09 17:17 2013
August 09 17:19 2013
August 09 17:20 2013
August 09 17:21 2013
August 09 17:22 2013
August 09 17:23 2013
August 09 17:24 2013
to print from a point in this file, to the end of the file, i type:
awk '/August 09 17:22/,0' data.txt.
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i need to find one of the value from my file is in between two numbers, that is the value is greater than 34 and smaller than 50,
Ex: File.txt
col1 col2 col3 col4
1 Name1 93 w
2 Name2 94 a
3 Name3 32 b
4 Name4 45 x
5 Name5 50 y
6 Name6 49 z
here i need to find col3 values are... (7 Replies)
I have a csv file as given below,
org1 org2 org3 org4 org5
gene1 100 80 90 80 150
gene2 30 70 50 50 115
gene3 40 120 60 40 105
gene4 20 72 40 60 20
I need to replace the fields are having values greater than 100 with "TRUE". I used the following commands to replace... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: dineshkumarsrk
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
tk::x11font
X11Font(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation X11Font(3)NAME
Tk::Font - a class for finding X Fonts
SYNOPSIS
use Tk::X11Font;
$font = $widget->X11Font(foundry => 'adobe',
family => 'times',
point => 120
);
$font = $widget->X11Font('*-courier-medium-r-normal-*-*');
DESCRIPTION
This module can be use to interrogate the X server what fonts are
avaliable.
METHODS
Foundry( [ $val ] )
Family( [ $val ] )
Weight( [ $val ] )
Slant( [ $val ] )
Swidth( [ $val ] )
Adstyle( [ $val ] )
Pixel( [ $val ] )
Point( [ $val ] )
Xres( [ $val ] )
Yres( [ $val ] )
Space( [ $val ] )
Avgwidth( [ $val ] )
Registry( [ $val ] )
Encoding( [ $val ] )
Set the given field in the font name to $val if given and return the current or previous value
Name( [ $max ] )
In a list context it returns a list of all font names that match the fields given. It will return a maximum of $max names, or 128 if $max
is not given.
In a scalar contex it returns the first matching name or undef
Clone( [ key => value, [ ...]] )
Create a duplicate of the curent font object and modify the given fields
AUTHOR
Graham Barr <Graham.Barr@tiuk.ti.com>
HISTORY
11-Jan-96 Initial version
08-Nov-98 Renamed for Tk800.012
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.1 2007-05-05 X11Font(3)