Ok, this is a unique question.
Say I have a word like "jamamamama" in a file called foo.bar.
Now, how do you get the line number that the word "jamammama" exist in the file foo.bar without having to go into the foo.bar file to edit it?
is there a command i can run on the foo.bar... (4 Replies)
Howdy experts,
We have some ranges of number which belongs to particual group as below.
GroupNo StartRange EndRange
Group0125 935300 935399
Group2006 935400 935476
937430 937459
Group0324 935477 935549
... (6 Replies)
Hello All,
I am having problem to find what is the smallest number from 90% of highest numbers from all numbers in file. I am having file with thousands of lines and hundreds of columns.
I am familiar mainly with bash but I am open to whatever suggestion witch will lead to the solutions.
If I... (11 Replies)
I have a csv file with occasional multiple entries in the second column.
111111,104,07-24-2011,3.15,N,
222222,020 140,07-24-2011,10.00,N,I want the result
111111,104,07-24-2011,3.15,N,
222222,020,07-24-2011,10.00,N,
222222,140,07-24-2011,10.00,N,
I know I can get the output of the second... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a csv file that appears as follows:
,2013/03/26,2012/12/26,4,1,"2017/09/26,5.75%","2017/09/26,1,2018/09/26,1,2019/09/26,1,2020/09/26,1,2021/09/26,1",,,2012/12/26,now when i use the split function like this:
my @f = split/,/; the split function will split the data that is... (2 Replies)
Hi again. Sorry for all the questions — I've tried to do all this myself but I'm just not good enough yet, and the help I've received so far from bartus11 has been absolutely invaluable. Hopefully this will be the last bit of file manipulation I need to do.
I have a file which is formatted as... (4 Replies)
Hi, I am newbie in shell script.
I need your help to solve my problem.
Firstly, I have 2 files of csv and i want to compare of the contents then the output will be written in a new csv file.
File1:
SourceFile,DateTimeOriginal
/home/intannf/foto/IMG_0713.JPG,2015:02:17 11:14:07... (8 Replies)
Hi, all
I want to sort a csv file based on timestamp from oldest to newest and save the output as csv file itself. Here is an example of my csv file.
test.csv
SourceFile,DateTimeOriginal
/home/intannf/foto/IMG_0739.JPG,2015:02:17 11:32:21
/home/intannf/foto/IMG_0749.JPG,2015:02:17 11:37:28... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have another problem. I want to sort another csv file by the first field.
result.csv
SourceFile,Airspeed,GPSLatitude,GPSLongitude,Temperature,Pressure,Altitude,Roll,Pitch,Yaw
/home/intannf/foto5/2015_0313_090651_219.JPG,0.,-7.77223,110.37310,30.75,996.46,148.75,180.94,182.00,63.92 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: refrain
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
spreadsheet::xlsx::utility2007
Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility2007(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility2007(3pm)NAME
Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility2007 - Utility function for Spreadsheet::XLSX
SYNOPSIS
use strict;
#Declare
use Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility qw(ExcelFmt ExcelLocaltime LocaltimeExcel);
#Convert localtime ->Excel Time
my $iBirth = LocaltimeExcel(11, 10, 12, 23, 2, 64);
# = 1964-3-23 12:10:11
print $iBirth, "
"; # 23459.5070717593
#Convert Excel Time -> localtime
my @aBirth = ExcelLocaltime($iBirth, undef);
print join(":", @aBirth), "
"; # 11:10:12:23:2:64:1:0
#Formatting
print ExcelFmt('yyyy-mm-dd', $iBirth), "
"; #1964-3-23
print ExcelFmt('m-d-yy', $iBirth), "
"; # 3-23-64
print ExcelFmt('#,##0', $iBirth), "
"; # 23,460
print ExcelFmt('#,##0.00', $iBirth), "
"; # 23,459.51
print ExcelFmt('"My Birthday is (m/d):" m/d', $iBirth), "
";
# My Birthday is (m/d): 3/23
DESCRIPTION
Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility exports utility functions concerned with Excel format setting.
ExcelFmt is used by Spreadsheet::XLSX::Fmt2007.pm which is used by Spreadsheet::XLSX.
Functions
This module can export 3 functions: ExcelFmt, ExcelLocaltime and LocaltimeExcel.
ExcelFmt
$sTxt = ExcelFmt($sFmt, $iData [, $i1904]);
$sFmt is a format string for Excel. $iData is the target value. If $flg1904 is true, this functions assumes that epoch is 1904. $sTxt is
the result.
For more detail and examples, please refer sample/chkFmt.pl in this distribution.
ex.
ExcelLocaltime
($iSec, $iMin, $iHour, $iDay, $iMon, $iYear, $iwDay, $iMSec) =
ExcelLocaltime($iExTime [, $flg1904]);
ExcelLocaltime converts time information in Excel format into Perl localtime format. $iExTime is a time of Excel. If $flg1904 is true,
this functions assumes that epoch is 1904. $iSec, $iMin, $iHour, $iDay, $iMon, $iYear, $iwDay are same as localtime. $iMSec means
1/1,000,000 seconds(ms).
LocaltimeExcel
$iExTime = LocaltimeExcel($iSec, $iMin, $iHour, $iDay, $iMon, $iYear [,$iMSec] [,$flg1904])
LocaltimeExcel converts time information in Perl localtime format into Excel format . $iSec, $iMin, $iHour, $iDay, $iMon, $iYear are same
as localtime.
If $flg1904 is true, this functions assumes that epoch is 1904. $iExTime is a time of Excel.
col2int
$iInt = col2int($sCol);
converts a excel row letter into an int for use in an array
This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.
int2col
$sCol = int2col($iRow);
convert a column number into column letters NOET: This is quite a brute force coarse method does not manage values over 701 (ZZ)
This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.
sheetRef
($iRow, $iCol) = sheetRef($sStr);
convert an excel letter-number address into a useful array address NOTE: That also Excel uses X-Y notation, we normally use Y-X in arrays
$sStr, excel coord (eg. A2).
This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.
xls2csv
$sCsvTxt = xls2csv($sFileName, $sRegion, $iRotate);
convert a chunk of an excel file into csv text chunk $sRegions = "sheet-colrow:colrow" (ex. '1-A1:B2' means 'A1:B2' for sheet 1) $iRotate
= 0 or 1 (output should be rotated or not)
This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.
AUTHOR
Rob Polocz rob.polocz@trackvia.com based on work by for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel by Kawai Takanori (Hippo2000) used with permission
SEE ALSO
Spreadsheet::ParseExcel, Spreadsheet::WriteExcel
COPYRIGHT
This module is part of the Spreadsheet::XLSX distribution.
perl v5.10.1 2010-05-16 Spreadsheet::XLSX::Utility2007(3pm)