Hi,
How is it possible to get all the columns on the screen while v run a script.. Thr r abt 30 columns.. and whn i run the script the columns in the output r all messed up..
Please help..
Thanks..
RRVARMA (1 Reply)
I'm writing a script to analyze the logs of an smtp relay machine and I'd like the final output to be displayed in columns showing results from the previous day, week, month, and 45 days. The problem I'm running into is that I can't figure out how to display the columns neatly so there is no... (1 Reply)
I need to extract information (for example, file owner, directory path, etc). However, the code below does not work? What is wrong?
find /usr/local/www/apache22/data/dev/chown_test -ls
for i in *
do
cut -f 1,2 "$i" | echo
done (3 Replies)
Hi All
I'm running a shell script and the output is something like:
Col1 Col2 Col3
aaaa aaaaaaa aaaaa
bbbbb bbbbb bbbbbb
ccc cccccc ccccccc
But I require the output to printed as given below:
Col1 Col2 Col3
aaaa ... (4 Replies)
Hello Friends,
Hope you are doing well.
I am writing a shell script to find out the log file which are not updated in last 1 hours. I've almost completed the script but need your help in formatting its outputs.
Currently, the output of the script is like this(as a flat row):
... (3 Replies)
User with moderate experience:
I run a script (my addiction is KSH) that reads a file and reports certain parameters back to the user on screen and also piped to a file. The file(s) I read is/are located under different directories, and is usually called the same thing. Sometimes not. For... (3 Replies)
Hi All, can you help me with this:
grep XXX dir/*.txt|wc -l > newfile.txt - this put the results in the newfile.txt, but I want to add another column in the newfile.txt, string 'YYYYY', separated somehow, which corresponds on the grep results?
For example grep will grep XXX dir/*.txt|wc -l >... (5 Replies)
Normal grep is not working to get the output.
Sample Input:
newjob: abc
command name: a=b+c
newjob: bbc
command name: c=r+v
newjob:ddc
newjob:kkc
command name: c=l+g
newjob:mdc
newjob:ldc
newjob:kjc
command name: u=dl+g
newjob:lkdc
newjob:lksdc
command name: o=udl+g (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: onesuri
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
extutils::typemaps::outputmap
ExtUtils::Typemaps::OutputMap(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide ExtUtils::Typemaps::OutputMap(3pm)NAME
ExtUtils::Typemaps::OutputMap - Entry in the OUTPUT section of a typemap
SYNOPSIS
use ExtUtils::Typemaps;
...
my $output = $typemap->get_output_map('T_NV');
my $code = $output->code();
$output->code("...");
DESCRIPTION
Refer to ExtUtils::Typemaps for details.
METHODS
new
Requires "xstype" and "code" parameters.
code
Returns or sets the OUTPUT mapping code for this entry.
xstype
Returns the name of the XS type of the OUTPUT map.
cleaned_code
Returns a cleaned-up copy of the code to which certain transformations have been applied to make it more ANSI compliant.
targetable
This is an obscure optimization that used to live in "ExtUtils::ParseXS" directly.
In a nutshell, this will check whether the output code involves calling "set_iv", "set_uv", "set_nv", "set_pv" or "set_pvn" to set the
special $arg placeholder to a new value AT THE END OF THE OUTPUT CODE. If that is the case, the code is eligible for using the
"TARG"-related macros to optimize this. Thus the name of the method: "targetable".
If the optimization can not be applied, this returns undef. If it can be applied, this method returns a hash reference containing the
following information:
type: Any of the characters i, u, n, p
with_size: Bool indicating whether this is the sv_setpvn variant
what: The code that actually evaluates to the output scalar
what_size: If "with_size", this has the string length (as code,
not constant)
SEE ALSO
ExtUtils::Typemaps
AUTHOR
Steffen Mueller "<smueller@cpan.org">
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Steffen Mueller
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.16.2 2012-10-11 ExtUtils::Typemaps::OutputMap(3pm)