Somehow someone created a file named '-ov' in the root directory.
Given the name, the how was probably the result of some cpio command they bozo'ed.
I've tried a number of different ways to get rid of it using * and ? wildcards, '\' escape patterns etc.. They all fail with " illegal option --... (3 Replies)
I would like to know how to trim leading zero only in certain column of of a string, example:
hdhshdhdhd000012mmmm0002abc <===== before
hdhshdhdhd 12mmmm 2abc <===== after
Thanks for your help. (2 Replies)
I need a way to build variable in this manner:
variable_$i
Inside a for loop i need to create it.
where i goes from 1 to 30..
and then i need to print them on screen with echo $variable_$i
which is the best way to do this? (6 Replies)
HI
In my script, i am reading the input from the user and want to find the length of the string.
The input may contain leading spaces. Right now, when leading spaces are there, they are not counted.
Kindly help me
My script is like below. I am using the ksh.
#!/usr/bin/ksh
echo... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
Given a file name such as
EXAMPLE=lastname-02.30.71-firstname-town-other.tar.gz
How do I print everything before the first dash (i.e. lastname)
Note: I do not know exactly how many dashes or what information there will be in each file name so it is important that the code... (2 Replies)
Hello I have two vars loaded with
$VAR1="ISOMETHING103"
$VAR2="COTHERTHING04"
I need to:
1) Strip the first char. Could be sed 's/^.//'
2) The number has it's rules. If it has "hundreds", it needs to be striped.
If it is just two digits it shouldn't.
So, for VAR1 output should be... (7 Replies)
In a SCO Unix shop, I am working on the following script to move any file to its same location on the target machine (called 'othersy' here):
pwd=`pwd`
for i in "$@"
do
echo " $i "
if ; then echo 1; else echo 0; fi
rcp -p $i othersy:$pwd/$i
echo "Finished with ^ If I find a file... (4 Replies)
I have below code inside my awk script
if ( $0 ~ /SVC IN:/ )
{
svc_in=substr( $0,23 , 3);
if (msg_start == 1 && msg_end == 0)
{
msg_arr=$0;
}
}
else if ( $0 ~ /^SVC OUT:/ )
{
svc_out=substr( $0, 9, 3);
if (msg_start == 1 && msg_end == 0)
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhagya123
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
tcl_concat
Tcl_Concat(3) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_Concat(3)__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
Tcl_Concat - concatenate a collection of strings
SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h>
const char *
Tcl_Concat(argc, argv)
ARGUMENTS
int argc (in) Number of strings.
const char *const argv[] (in) Array of strings to concatenate. Must have argc entries.
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Tcl_Concat is a utility procedure used by several of the Tcl commands. Given a collection of strings, it concatenates them together into a
single string, with the original strings separated by spaces. This procedure behaves differently than Tcl_Merge, in that the arguments are
simply concatenated: no effort is made to ensure proper list structure. However, in most common usage the arguments will all be proper
lists themselves; if this is true, then the result will also have proper list structure.
Tcl_Concat eliminates leading and trailing white space as it copies strings from argv to the result. If an element of argv consists of
nothing but white space, then that string is ignored entirely. This white-space removal was added to make the output of the concat command
cleaner-looking.
The result string is dynamically allocated using Tcl_Alloc; the caller must eventually release the space by calling Tcl_Free.
SEE ALSO
Tcl_ConcatObj
KEYWORDS
concatenate, strings
Tcl 7.5 Tcl_Concat(3)