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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting addition of both positive and negative numbers Post 302470516 by Scrutinizer on Wednesday 10th of November 2010 09:57:28 AM
Old 11-10-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by vgersh99
not all ksh-s provide floating point arithmetics
Correct, that should be ksh93.
Quote:
This doesn't work with Solaris' Bourne shell (/bin/sh)
It works with any Posix shell (so /usr/xpg4/bin/sh on Solaris).
But this should just work in Bourne shell as well, shouldn't it? Did you try?
-----
edit: Ah, I see you did not mean the loop but the second part: because of the $() .
Then you can use:
Code:
v=`cat infile`; echo ${v#?} | bc


Last edited by Scrutinizer; 11-10-2010 at 11:02 AM..
 

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getusershell(3C)					   Standard C Library Functions 					  getusershell(3C)

NAME
getusershell, setusershell, endusershell - get legal user shells SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> char *getusershell(void); void setusershell(void); void endusershell(void); DESCRIPTION
The getusershell() function returns a pointer to a legal user shell as defined by the system manager in the file /etc/shells. If /etc/shells does not exist, the following locations of the standard system shells are used in its place: /bin/bash /bin/csh /bin/jsh /bin/ksh /bin/ksh93 /bin/pfcsh /bin/pfksh /bin/pfsh /bin/sh /bin/tcsh /bin/zsh /sbin/jsh /sbin/pfsh /sbin/sh /usr/bin/bash /usr/bin/csh /usr/bin/jsh /usr/bin/ksh /usr/bin/ksh93 /usr/bin/pfcsh /usr/bin/pfksh /usr/bin/pfsh /usr/bin/sh /usr/bin/tcsh /usr/bin/zsh /usr/sfw/bin/zsh /usr/xpg4/bin/sh The getusershell() function opens the file /etc/shells, if it exists, and returns the next entry in the list of shells. The setusershell() function rewinds the file or the list. The endusershell() function closes the file, frees any memory used by getusershell() and setusershell(), and rewinds the file /etc/shells. RETURN VALUES
The getusershell() function returns a null pointer on EOF. BUGS
All information is contained in memory that may be freed with a call to endusershell(), so it must be copied if it is to be saved. NOTES
Restricted shells should not be listed in /etc/shells. SunOS 5.11 1 Nov 2007 getusershell(3C)
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