If you want to get more familiar with perl, in any case it is recommendable to study the man pages (which in case of perl are very instructive), the most basic ones are:
perlrun, perlsyn, perldata, perlop, perlfunc (second level: perlsub, perlre, perlvar)
how to parse the command line argument to look for '@' sign and the following with '.'.
In my shell script one of the argument passed is email address. I want to parse this email address to look for correct format.
rmjoe123@hotmail.com has '@' sign and followed by a '.'
to be more... (1 Reply)
how to parse the command line argument to look for '@' sign and the following with '.'.
In my shell script one of the argument passed is email address. I want to parse this email address to look for correct format.
rmjoe123@hotmail.com has '@' sign and followed by a '.'
to be more... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
Iam a beginer in shell scripting.
i need a script that can parse the arguments and store them in variables.
ex: ./myScript -v v1 -h v2 -c v3......
can someone suggest me...?
tnx in adv. (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have to check whether an argument say $ARGV is not null in an if operator. Please let me know the operator. It would be great if you write a psuedo code.
Thanks in advance
Ammu (4 Replies)
public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String args) {
System.out.println("Welcome, master");
}
}
and I compiled using
javac HelloWorld.java
]
Suppose that I execute the following command directly from the shell:
java -XX:OnError="gdb - %p" HelloWorld
Then it works... (8 Replies)
i wanna passing an argument which read in a file or a set of files if the files are given in the command line, otherwise use STDIN if no file argument.
i got something like that, but it is not really working.
so can anyone help me? which one is better to use for and how? Use perl.
Thank you
... (0 Replies)
If i have a script name.pl
I run it like name.pl -v file.txt -t ext2 -u user -j
how can I edit the array @ARGV so when my script calls
$ARGV = -v file.txt
$ARGV = -j (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to run a bash script using perl. But they are in the different dir.
#! /usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
my $root=`pwd`;
chomp($root);
my $cmd=".$root/testdir/ft_623.sh 3 4 5 6 7";
print $cmd;
my @line=`$cmd`;
foreach (@line){
print $_;
}
ft_623.sh (0 Replies)
Hello all, I am relatively new to linux and bash scripting. I have what seems to be a simple question but I'm having trouble finding the answer.
The question is what is the difference between the variables $@ and $*. I've seen them both used in the same context, and I've tried a number of... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nicthu
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
pod::htmlpspdf::html
Pod::HtmlPsPdf::Html(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Pod::HtmlPsPdf::Html(3)NAME
Pod::Html - module to convert pod files to HTML
SYNOPSIS
use Pod::Html;
pod2html([options]);
DESCRIPTION
Converts files from pod format (see perlpod) to HTML format. It can automatically generate indexes and cross-references, and it keeps a
cache of things it knows how to cross-reference.
ARGUMENTS
Pod::Html takes the following arguments:
help
--help
Displays the usage message.
htmlroot
--htmlroot=name
Sets the base URL for the HTML files. When cross-references are made, the HTML root is prepended to the URL.
infile
--infile=name
Specify the pod file to convert. Input is taken from STDIN if no infile is specified.
outfile
--outfile=name
Specify the HTML file to create. Output goes to STDOUT if no outfile is specified.
podroot
--podroot=name
Specify the base directory for finding library pods.
podpath
--podpath=name:...:name
Specify which subdirectories of the podroot contain pod files whose HTML converted forms can be linked-to in cross-references.
libpods
--libpods=name:...:name
List of page names (eg, "perlfunc") which contain linkable "=item"s.
netscape
--netscape
Use Netscape HTML directives when applicable.
nonetscape
--nonetscape
Do not use Netscape HTML directives (default).
index
--index
Generate an index at the top of the HTML file (default behaviour).
noindex
--noindex
Do not generate an index at the top of the HTML file.
recurse
--recurse
Recurse into subdirectories specified in podpath (default behaviour).
norecurse
--norecurse
Do not recurse into subdirectories specified in podpath.
title
--title=title
Specify the title of the resulting HTML file.
verbose
--verbose
Display progress messages.
EXAMPLE
pod2html("pod2html",
"--podpath=lib:ext:pod:vms",
"--podroot=/usr/src/perl",
"--htmlroot=/perl/nmanual",
"--libpods=perlfunc:perlguts:perlvar:perlrun:perlop",
"--recurse",
"--infile=foo.pod",
"--outfile=/perl/nmanual/foo.html");
AUTHOR
Originally written by Tom Christiansen, <tchrist@perl.com>.
Modified by Stas Bekman <stas@stason.org>.
BUGS
Has trouble with "" etc in = commands.
SEE ALSO
perlpod
COPYRIGHT
This program is distributed under the Artistic License.
perl v5.12.1 2001-01-11 Pod::HtmlPsPdf::Html(3)