Hi,
I have several text files each containing some data as shown below:
File1.txt
>DataHeader
Data...
Data...
File2.txt
>DataHeader
Data...
Data...
etc.
What I want is to change the 'DataHeader' based on the file name. So the output should look like:
File1.txt
>File1
... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I want to remove the content based on the header information .
Please find the example below.
File1.txt
Name|Last|First|Location|DepId|Depname|DepLoc
naga|rr|tion|hyd|1|wer|opr
Nava|ra|tin|gen|2|wera|opra
I have to search for the DepId and remove the data from the... (5 Replies)
i have a input of csv file as below but the sequence of column get changed.
I,e it is not necessary that name comes first then age and rest all, it may vary.
name,age,marks,roll,section
kevin,25,80,456,A
Satch,23,56,789,B
Meena,24,78,H245,C
So i want to print that column entires which... (12 Replies)
Hello,
I'm using Windows 7 ; sed, awk and gnuwin32 are installed.
I have a big text file I need to manipulate.
In short, I will have to split it in thousands of short files, then rename and save in a folder which name is based upon filename.
Here is a snippet of my big input.txt file (this... (4 Replies)
I have 2 input files (tab separated):
file1:
make_A 1990 foo bar
make_B 2010 this that
make_C 2004 these those
file2:
make_X 1970 1995 ref_1:43 ref_2:65
make_A 1970 1995 ref_1:4 ref_2:21 ref_3:18
make_A 1980 2002 ref_1:7 ref_2:7 ref_3:0 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: beca123456
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
xml::parser::style::tree
Parser::Style::Tree(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Parser::Style::Tree(3)NAME
XML::Parser::Style::Tree
SYNOPSIS
use XML::Parser;
my $p = XML::Parser->new(Style => 'Tree');
my $tree = $p->parsefile('foo.xml');
DESCRIPTION
This module implements XML::Parser's Tree style parser.
When parsing a document, "parse()" will return a parse tree for the document. Each node in the tree takes the form of a tag, content pair.
Text nodes are represented with a pseudo-tag of "0" and the string that is their content. For elements, the content is an array reference.
The first item in the array is a (possibly empty) hash reference containing attributes. The remainder of the array is a sequence of tag-
content pairs representing the content of the element.
So for example the result of parsing:
<foo><head id="a">Hello <em>there</em></head><bar>Howdy<ref/></bar>do</foo>
would be:
Tag Content
==================================================================
[foo, [{}, head, [{id => "a"}, 0, "Hello ", em, [{}, 0, "there"]],
bar, [ {}, 0, "Howdy", ref, [{}]],
0, "do"
]
]
The root document "foo", has 3 children: a "head" element, a "bar" element and the text "do". After the empty attribute hash, these are
represented in it's contents by 3 tag-content pairs.
perl v5.12.1 2003-07-31 Parser::Style::Tree(3)