Hi Yinyuemi,
Many thanks for the timely help. The residue problem seems to be sorted with the new code. However the largest string issue still remains.
I used the code which you had posted (reproduced below)
And I still get
The boy ran through slow ly
for
theboyranthroughslowly
Sorry to hassle you, but the largest string split is vital for the dictionary work I am doing.
Many thanks once again and hoping to read you,
Best regards,
Gimley
Last edited by Franklin52; 02-24-2011 at 03:32 AM..
Reason: Please use code tags
Hi,
I have a string like this in a file,
I want to retrive the words separated by comma's in 3 variables. like
How do i get that.plz advice (2 Replies)
hello,
i 'd like your help about a bash script which:
1. finds inside the html file (it is attached with my post) the code number of the Latest Stable Kernel,
2.finds the link which leads to the download location of the Latest Stable Kernel version,
(the right link should lead to the file... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to split the words having the delimiter as colon ';' in to separate files using awk.
Here's my code.
echo "f1;f2;f3" | awk '/;/{c=sprintf("%02d",++i); close("out" c)} {print > "out" c}'
echo "f1;f2;f3" | awk -v i=0 '/;/{close("out"i); i++; next} {print > "out"i}'
But... (4 Replies)
hello,
I had posted earlier help for a script for splitting concatenated words . The script was supposed to read words from a master file and split concatenated words in the slave/input file.
Thanks to the help I got, the following script which works very well was posted. It detects residues by... (14 Replies)
Dear all,
I am working with names and I have a large file of names in which some words are written together (upto 4 or 5) and their corresponding single forms are also present in the word-list.
An example would make this clear
annamarie
mariechristine
johnsmith
johnjoseph smith
john
smith... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I am sorry if the title is confusing, but I need a script to grep a list of Names from a Source file in a Master database in which all the homophonic variants of the name are listed along with a single indexing key and store all of these in an output file. I need this because I am testing... (4 Replies)
Hi ,
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Hi
I have strings like these :
Vengeance mitt
Men Vengeance gloves
Women Quatro Windstopper Etip gloves
Quatro Windstopper Etip gloves
Girls Thermobite hooded jacket
Thermobite Triclimate snow jacket
Boys Thermobite Triclimate snow jacket
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Hello,
I would like to change my setting in a file to the setting that user input.
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ONBOOT=ON
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ONBOOT=YES
--------------
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Hi All,
I need one help to replace particular words in file based on if finds another words in that file .
i.e.
my self is peter@king.
i am staying at north sydney.
we all are peter@king.
How to replace peter to sham if it finds @king in any line of that file.
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Discussion started by: Rajib Podder
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
file::find::wanted
Wanted(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Wanted(3pm)NAME
File::Find::Wanted - More obvious wrapper around File::Find
VERSION
Version 1.00
SYNOPSIS
File::Find is a great module, except that it doesn't actually find anything. Its "find()" function walks a directory tree and calls a
callback function. Unfortunately, the callback function is deceptively called "wanted", which implies that it should return a boolean
saying whether you want the file. That's not how it works.
Most of the time you call "find()", you just want to build a list of files. There are other modules that do this for you, most notably
Richard Clamp's great File::Find::Rule, but in many cases, it's overkill, and you need to learn a new syntax.
With the "find_wanted" function, you supply a callback sub and a list of starting directories, but the sub actually should return a boolean
saying whether you want the file in your list or not.
To get a list of all files ending in .jpg:
my @files = find_wanted( sub { -f && /.jpg$/ }, $dir );
For a list of all directories that are not CVS or .svn:
my @files = find_wanted( sub { -d && !/^(CVS|.svn)$/ }, $dir ) );
It's easy, direct, and simple.
WHY DO THIS ?
The cynical may say "that's just the same as doing this":
my @files;
find( sub { push @files, $File::Find::name if -f && /.jpg$/ }, $dir );
Sure it is, but File::Find::Wanted makes it more obvious, and saves a line of code. That's worth it to me. I'd like it if find_wanted()
made its way into the File::Find distro, but for now, this will do.
FUNCTIONS
find_wanted( &wanted, @directories )
Descends through @directories, calling the wanted function as it finds each file. The function returns a list of all the files and
directories for which the wanted function returned a true value.
This is just a wrapper around "File::Find::find()". See File::Find for details on how to modify its behavior.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2005-2012 Andy Lester.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License v2.0.
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-08 Wanted(3pm)