hi, I have an xml file and I need to replace the tags with different names all at a time here is what I have
<cevalue>
<cevalue1>
<cevalue2>
<cevalue3>
<cevalue4>
<cevalue5>
and I need these like these...
<cevalue>
<cevalue>
<cevalue>
<cevalue>
<cevalue>
<cevalue>
I tried a few but... (2 Replies)
I have a series of folders /temp/a /temp/b /temp/c
In folders a, b, and c, I have files
a1.txt..........a20.txt
b1.txt..........b40.txt &
c1.txt..........c60.txt
Each file has the same data format :-
Line 1 AAAAA aaaa
Line 2 BBB bbbbbb
Line 3 CCCC cccccc
Etc etc
I need to write a... (13 Replies)
I'm writing a script which word counts the number of lines in two files. If one file is bigger than the other I'd like to edit one of the files to delete some lines to make both the same. It does not matter where in the file the lines are deleted from. It's expected that this will be ran from... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a file which looks like this
//string = "abcd"; //info
//string = "*pqrs"; //add
string = "#123"; //sub
//string = "#1234567890"
data = check(string)
//string = "#1234567890"
I want to modify this as
string = "#987"; //mult
data = check(string)
How do i do that? (1 Reply)
Hi Penchal,
I would appreciate if you can provide me a brief explanation on what you are trying to do in the commnad below.
echo "6-9-2008" | sed 's/\(.\)-\(.\)-\(.*\)/\3-0\2-0\1/g'
Thanks
Amit (1 Reply)
I have done a script using sed which replaces a string in file.
I face 2 problems, while using sed command.
1)last line of the file is missing.
2)if i am are using wild card character in the command, Its not taking the next matching pattern ie if I am giving the pattern abc*def to be replaced... (2 Replies)
hi
i had posted this earlier.. got no reply !!
how to change assigned value in a file using sed
suppose the file contains
age = 30;
how to change it to
age =50;
i tried sed 's/^age*./age =50;' filename but i am getting the o/p as
age =50; 30;
plz hlp!! (4 Replies)
I have a sed query.
There is a line which has tilde and I want to separate this line using sed.
The line is:
ABP_ETC_ROOT=~xdmadm
The query to get this line is:
sed -n '/\(.*\)~\(.*\)/p' infile
I want to get xdmadm from this line and I am using this sed command:
sed -n... (5 Replies)
Hello Im fairly familiar with using the sed command for substitution, however I have been passed a script which checks the logged on username and directory type with a sed section which I cant figure out. The sed function has me baffled and I cant find out from the man page what its trying to do... (1 Reply)
Hi all, I am trying to use SED to input lines to a file in a specific place.
So far I have;
sed '/#NewEntry/ i\Insert this line' myfile.txt
The output is printing to screen correctly but what is the best way to write it back to the file without overwriting everything?
I tried adding >... (6 Replies)
Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitCommUseraContriPerl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitCommaSeparatedStatements(3)NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitCommaSeparatedStatements - Don't use the comma operator as a statement separator.
AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
DESCRIPTION
Perl's comma statement separator has really low precedence, which leads to code that looks like it's using the comma list element separator
not actually doing so. Conway suggests that the statement separator not be used in order to prevent this situation.
The confusion that the statement separator causes is primarily due to the assignment operators having higher precedence.
For example, trying to combine two arrays into another like this won't work:
@x = @y, @z;
because it is equivalent to
@x = @y;
@z;
Conversely, there are the built-in functions, like "print", that normally force the rest of the statement into list context, but don't when
called like a subroutine.
This is not likely to produce what is intended:
print join q{, }, 2, 3, 5, 7, ": the single-digit primes.
";
The obvious fix is to add parentheses. Placing them like
print join( q{, }, 2, 3, 5, 7 ), ": the single-digit primes.
";
will work, but
print ( join q{, }, 2, 3, 5, 7 ), ": the single-digit primes.
";
will not, because it is equivalent to
print( join q{, }, 2, 3, 5, 7 );
": the single-digit primes.
";
CONFIGURATION
This policy can be configured to allow the last statement in a "map" or "grep" block to be comma separated. This is done via the
"allow_last_statement_to_be_comma_separated_in_map_and_grep" option like so:
[ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitCommaSeparatedStatements]
allow_last_statement_to_be_comma_separated_in_map_and_grep = 1
With this option off (the default), the following code violates this policy.
%hash = map {$_, 1} @list;
With this option on, this statement is allowed. Even if this option is off, using a fat comma "=>" works, but that forces stringification
on the first value, which may not be what you want.
BUGS
Needs to check for "scalar( something, something )".
AUTHOR
Elliot Shank "<perl@galumph.com>"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2007-2011 Elliot Shank.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license
can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
perl v5.16.3Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitCommaSeparatedStatements(3)