Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Scripting Programs
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Scripting Programs Post 302502147 by malcomex999 on Monday 7th of March 2011 03:40:37 AM
Old 03-07-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mack1982
What I am looking for is a software that make writing scripts easy. For example I can write HTML code in either notepad or visual studio. But with visual studio, i get different colors and other features that help me read and writes code easily. Another example would be SQL pretty printer for SQL code
Well, you can write scripting language in any editor which you prefer like VI, emac or Ultraedit if you are on windows platform.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Where did my programs go?

I notice that (Mandrake) Linux and Windows do not seem to operate alike in terms of installing third party software. Windows, on one hand, creates icons and adds items to the Start Menu, with the help of the InstallShield--or equivalent, of course, but Linux, on the other hand, seems to care... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: helvetica
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

shell programs

how to write pipe for finding out the login names and login time of the users whose login name begins with p. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rameshparsa
1 Replies

3. Debian

Uninstalling programs?

How can I uninstall a program the most efficient way? So that I get rid of all the man pages etc. too? I'm running debian. /Richard (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: riwa
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing Programs

Hello, I have a simple question. How do make it so i can lauch a program from the shell. For instance I want to install firefox 2 and I wanna launch it with ff2 in the terminal, so i tried this to my .bashrc file: alias ff2='/path/./firefox' and its not working as I would hope. anywho,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: SeamusHC
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Are programs like sys_open( ) ,sys_read( ) et al examples of system level programs ?

Are the programs written on schedulers ,thread library , process management, memory management, et al called systems programs ? How are they different from the programs that implement functions like open() , printf() , scanf() , read() .. they have a prefix sys_open, sys_close, sys_read etc , right... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vishwamitra
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Check programs used most

How can you check the programs that you use most often? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
6 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running programs

I have installed a software called GMT, then writing a script that call the new programs ./example02.sh but I am getting ./example02.sh: line 20: gmtset: command not found I have done ./configure make make install (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
0 Replies

8. Programming

Makefiles for different programs

I have several programs in several directories and want to use make to build the executables. What I have done is to put the main programs in their own directory together with a makefile to build the program. Then I am thinking of having another makefile residing in the directory above so I can run... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kristinu
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Difference between inbuilt suid programs and user defined root suid programs under bash shell?

Hey guys, Suppose i run passwd via bash shell. It is a suid program, which temporarily runs as root(owner) and modifies the user entries. However, when i write a C file and give 4755 permission and root ownership to the 'a.out' file , it doesn't run as root in bash shell. I verified this by... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: syncmaster
2 Replies

10. Homework & Coursework Questions

Need help on how to execute several programs

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: Get each of these programs to run. Prove that you've done this(use script). Give a description of each program along with sample executions. These are the exact programs we were given. 2. Relevant commands, code, scripts,... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: FaTaL
11 Replies
VALUES(7)							   SQL Commands 							 VALUES(7)

NAME
VALUES - compute a set of rows SYNOPSIS
VALUES ( expression [, ...] ) [, ...] [ ORDER BY sort_expression [ ASC | DESC | USING operator ] [, ...] ] [ LIMIT { count | ALL } ] [ OFFSET start [ ROW | ROWS ] ] [ FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ count ] { ROW | ROWS } ONLY ] DESCRIPTION
VALUES computes a row value or set of row values specified by value expressions. It is most commonly used to generate a ``constant table'' within a larger command, but it can be used on its own. When more than one row is specified, all the rows must have the same number of elements. The data types of the resulting table's columns are determined by combining the explicit or inferred types of the expressions appearing in that column, using the same rules as for UNION (see in the documentation). Within larger commands, VALUES is syntactically allowed anywhere that SELECT is. Because it is treated like a SELECT by the grammar, it is possible to use the ORDER BY, LIMIT (or equivalently FETCH FIRST), and OFFSET clauses with a VALUES command. PARAMETERS
expression A constant or expression to compute and insert at the indicated place in the resulting table (set of rows). In a VALUES list appear- ing at the top level of an INSERT, an expression can be replaced by DEFAULT to indicate that the destination column's default value should be inserted. DEFAULT cannot be used when VALUES appears in other contexts. sort_expression An expression or integer constant indicating how to sort the result rows. This expression can refer to the columns of the VALUES result as column1, column2, etc. For more details see ORDER BY Clause [select(7)]. operator A sorting operator. For details see ORDER BY Clause [select(7)]. count The maximum number of rows to return. For details see LIMIT Clause [select(7)]. start The number of rows to skip before starting to return rows. For details see LIMIT Clause [select(7)]. NOTES
VALUES lists with very large numbers of rows should be avoided, as you might encounter out-of-memory failures or poor performance. VALUES appearing within INSERT is a special case (because the desired column types are known from the INSERT's target table, and need not be inferred by scanning the VALUES list), so it can handle larger lists than are practical in other contexts. EXAMPLES
A bare VALUES command: VALUES (1, 'one'), (2, 'two'), (3, 'three'); This will return a table of two columns and three rows. It's effectively equivalent to: SELECT 1 AS column1, 'one' AS column2 UNION ALL SELECT 2, 'two' UNION ALL SELECT 3, 'three'; More usually, VALUES is used within a larger SQL command. The most common use is in INSERT: INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind) VALUES ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, '1961-06-16', 'Drama'); In the context of INSERT, entries of a VALUES list can be DEFAULT to indicate that the column default should be used here instead of speci- fying a value: INSERT INTO films VALUES ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, DEFAULT, 'Comedy', '82 minutes'), ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, DEFAULT, 'Drama', DEFAULT); VALUES can also be used where a sub-SELECT might be written, for example in a FROM clause: SELECT f.* FROM films f, (VALUES('MGM', 'Horror'), ('UA', 'Sci-Fi')) AS t (studio, kind) WHERE f.studio = t.studio AND f.kind = t.kind; UPDATE employees SET salary = salary * v.increase FROM (VALUES(1, 200000, 1.2), (2, 400000, 1.4)) AS v (depno, target, increase) WHERE employees.depno = v.depno AND employees.sales >= v.target; Note that an AS clause is required when VALUES is used in a FROM clause, just as is true for SELECT. It is not required that the AS clause specify names for all the columns, but it's good practice to do so. (The default column names for VALUES are column1, column2, etc in PostgreSQL, but these names might be different in other database systems.) When VALUES is used in INSERT, the values are all automatically coerced to the data type of the corresponding destination column. When it's used in other contexts, it might be necessary to specify the correct data type. If the entries are all quoted literal constants, coercing the first is sufficient to determine the assumed type for all: SELECT * FROM machines WHERE ip_address IN (VALUES('192.168.0.1'::inet), ('192.168.0.10'), ('192.168.1.43')); Tip: For simple IN tests, it's better to rely on the list-of-scalars form of IN than to write a VALUES query as shown above. The list of scalars method requires less writing and is often more efficient. COMPATIBILITY
VALUES conforms to the SQL standard. LIMIT and OFFSET are PostgreSQL extensions; see also under SELECT [select(7)]. SEE ALSO
INSERT [insert(7)], SELECT [select(7)] SQL - Language Statements 2010-05-14 VALUES(7)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:45 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy