I have written down a simple perl program to replace a string from a word file. My script does'nt seem to work. Any pointers to make it work will be appreciated. The code is given below.
#!/usr/bin/perl
while (<>) {
open(FILE,$_);
while (<FILE>) {
s/This/I did it/g;
}... (6 Replies)
I am very new to Perl. I am struggling so hard to search a date (such as 10/09/2009, 10-09-2009) from a text file and replace with a string (say DATE) using Perl. Please help me out. Thanks in advance.
Regds
Doren (4 Replies)
looking to replace parameters within a string with an external answer - with multiple replacements within a string %% will be used to wrap the objects to be replaced
i.e. hello %%title%% %%user%% from %%address%% you last %%action%% on %%object%%
the params will be used to make calls to a... (1 Reply)
find . -type f -name "*.sql" -print|xargs perl -i -pe 's/pattern/replaced/g'
this is simple logic to find and replace in multiple files & folders
Hope this helps.
Thanks
Zaheer (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am taking the current time using localtime function in perl. For example if the time is:
#Using localtime
$time = "12:3:10";
I have to replace the value 3 (03) i.e second position to be 03.
The output should be:
12:03:10
But if the other string for example:
$str:... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Can anyone help me to replace ='is NOT NULL' to is NOT NULL in perl.
I tried all the methods which i know, i didnt arrive at the solution.
please help!!
---------- Post updated at 03:01 PM ---------- Previous update was at 02:56 PM ----------
I got it.......!
Thanks, (1 Reply)
I have got few date format patterns like "yyyymmdd", "yy_mm_dd" etc.
There can be any combination of such patterns.
I have used add_delta_days to find "yyyy", "yy", "mm", "dd" for the current date and saved them to different variables like "$y1", "$y2", "$m1" etc
In one line, i want to... (10 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a number of files and each file has two sections separated by a blank line. At the top section, I have lines which describes the values of the alphabetical characters,
# s #; 0.123
# p #; 12.3
# d #; -2.33
# f #; 5.68
<blank line>
sssssss
spfdffff
sdfffffff
Now I... (4 Replies)
Hello Forum.
I have a file called abc.sed with the following commands;
s/1/one/g
s/2/two/g
...
I also have a second file called abc.dat and would like to substitute all occurrences of "1 with one", "2 with two", etc and create a new file called abc_new.dat
sed -f abc.sed abc.dat >... (10 Replies)
Trying to find and replace one string with another string in a file
#!/usr/bin/perl
$csd_table_path = "/file.ntab";
$find_str = '--bundle_type=021';
$repl_str = '--bundle_type=021 --target=/dev/disk1s2';
if( system("/usr/bin/perl -p -i -e 's/$find_str/$repl_str/' $csd_table_path")... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cillmor
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
graphics::primitive::insets
Graphics::Primitive::Insets(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Graphics::Primitive::Insets(3pm)NAME
Graphics::Primitive::Insets - Space between things
DESCRIPTION
Graphics::Primitive::Insets represents the amount of space that surrounds something. This object can be used to represent either padding
or margins (in the CSS sense, one being inside the bounding box, the other being outside)
SYNOPSIS
use Graphics::Primitive::Insets;
my $insets = Graphics::Primitive::Insets->new({
top => 5,
bottom => 5,
left => 5,
right => 5
});
METHODS
Constructor
new Creates a new Graphics::Primitive::Insets.
Instance Methods
as_array
Return these insets as an array in the form of top, right, bottom and left.
bottom
Set/Get the inset from the bottom.
equal_to
Determine if these Insets are equal to another.
left
Set/Get the inset from the left.
right
Set/Get the inset from the right.
top Set/Get the inset from the top.
zero
Sets all the insets (top, left, bottom, right) to 0.
AUTHOR
Cory Watson, "<gphat@cpan.org>"
SEE ALSO perl(1)COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2008-2010 by Cory G Watson.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.3 2010-08-21 Graphics::Primitive::Insets(3pm)