Hi Chaps,
I'm trying to print the line number of a comma delimited file where the second field in the line is blank using AWK. Here is the code I have so far where am I going wrong. It is the last column in the file.
nawk -v x==0 'BEGIN {FS=",";OFS=","} x++ if ($2 == " ") print $x' bob.tst
... (3 Replies)
hi,
i have a file, i need to search for a string , if the line contains i need to print that line number and line ,
please help
thanks in advance
Satya (5 Replies)
Hello,
I am testing some data to get line number at cursor position 9 and found some problem, the code is below.Assume we got 3 attribute. At second attribute, there are some data(eg.A41/A6) missing like at the fourth and six line
11006 A41 1888
11006 ... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I have a question on how to find the line number of the first column that contains specific data. I know how to print all the line numbers of those columns, but haven't been able to figure out how to print only the first one that is found.
For example, if my data has four columns:
115... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have written a script that returns the line number of the pattern i want and i stored the line number in a variable(getlinenumber).Now i want to delete all the lines in a file above this line number which is stored in a variable.
i am using sed '1,$getlinenumberd' > file1.txt which is... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have written a script that returns the line number of the pattern i want and i stored the line number in a variable.Now i want to delete all the lines in a file above this line number which is stored in a variable.
i am using sed '1,$getlinenumberd' > file1.txt which is not working(wrog... (5 Replies)
Hi,
How to print the number of fields in each record with the line number?
Lets saw I have
3212|shipped|received|
3213|shipped|undelivered|
3214|shipped|received|delivered
I tried the code
awk -F '|' '{print NF}'
This gives me ouput as
3
3
4 (5 Replies)
Good day, everyone!
I'm very new to bash scripting. Our teacher gave us a task to create a script that basically does the same job the 'du' command does, with the difference that 'du' command gives an output in the form of
<size> <folder name>and what we need is
<folder name> <size>As for... (1 Reply)
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
The task is to create a script that would reproduce the output of 'du' command, but in a different way: what 'du' does is:
<size> <folder name>and what is needed is
<folder name> <size>We need to show only 10 folders which are the... (3 Replies)
Hi I have a problem, I am attempting to write a bash script that goes through a file and can determine how many characters are at a set point in a line starting with QTY+113:100:PCE, If it detects 3 digits (number in bold) then pad it out with 12 zero's
If there are only two digits then pad it... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: firefox2k2
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
vmsish
vmsish(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide vmsish(3pm)NAME
vmsish - Perl pragma to control VMS-specific language features
SYNOPSIS
use vmsish;
use vmsish 'status'; # or '$?'
use vmsish 'exit';
use vmsish 'time';
use vmsish 'hushed';
no vmsish 'hushed';
vmsish::hushed($hush);
use vmsish;
no vmsish 'time';
DESCRIPTION
If no import list is supplied, all possible VMS-specific features are assumed. Currently, there are four VMS-specific features available:
'status' (a.k.a '$?'), 'exit', 'time' and 'hushed'.
If you're not running VMS, this module does nothing.
"vmsish status"
This makes $? and "system" return the native VMS exit status instead of emulating the POSIX exit status.
"vmsish exit"
This makes "exit 1" produce a successful exit (with status SS$_NORMAL), instead of emulating UNIX exit(), which considers "exit 1" to
indicate an error. As with the CRTL's exit() function, "exit 0" is also mapped to an exit status of SS$_NORMAL, and any other
argument to exit() is used directly as Perl's exit status.
"vmsish time"
This makes all times relative to the local time zone, instead of the default of Universal Time (a.k.a Greenwich Mean Time, or GMT).
"vmsish hushed"
This suppresses printing of VMS status messages to SYS$OUTPUT and SYS$ERROR if Perl terminates with an error status, and allows
programs that are expecting "unix-style" Perl to avoid having to parse VMS error messages. It does not suppress any messages from
Perl itself, just the messages generated by DCL after Perl exits. The DCL symbol $STATUS will still have the termination status, but
with a high-order bit set:
EXAMPLE:
$ perl -e"exit 44;" Non-hushed error exit
%SYSTEM-F-ABORT, abort DCL message
$ show sym $STATUS
$STATUS == "%X0000002C"
$ perl -e"use vmsish qw(hushed); exit 44;" Hushed error exit
$ show sym $STATUS
$STATUS == "%X1000002C"
The 'hushed' flag has a global scope during compilation: the exit() or die() commands that are compiled after 'vmsish hushed' will be
hushed when they are executed. Doing a "no vmsish 'hushed'" turns off the hushed flag.
The status of the hushed flag also affects output of VMS error messages from compilation errors. Again, you still get the Perl
error message (and the code in $STATUS)
EXAMPLE:
use vmsish 'hushed'; # turn on hushed flag
use Carp; # Carp compiled hushed
exit 44; # will be hushed
croak('I die'); # will be hushed
no vmsish 'hushed'; # turn off hushed flag
exit 44; # will not be hushed
croak('I die2'): # WILL be hushed, croak was compiled hushed
You can also control the 'hushed' flag at run-time, using the built-in routine vmsish::hushed(). Without argument, it returns the
hushed status. Since vmsish::hushed is built-in, you do not need to "use vmsish" to call it.
EXAMPLE:
if ($quiet_exit) {
vmsish::hushed(1);
}
print "Sssshhhh...I'm hushed...
" if vmsish::hushed();
exit 44;
Note that an exit() or die() that is compiled 'hushed' because of "use vmsish" is not un-hushed by calling vmsish::hushed(0) at
runtime.
The messages from error exits from inside the Perl core are generally more serious, and are not suppressed.
See "Perl Modules" in perlmod.
perl v5.16.3 2013-03-04 vmsish(3pm)