Hi everybody
I have some problems with PERL programming.
I have a file with two columns, both with numeric values.
I have to extract the values > 50 from the 2nd columns and sum them among them.
The I have to sum the respective values in the first column on the same line and, at the end, I... (6 Replies)
Can Anyone tell me how to extract the second column of a xls sheet
And compare the content of each row of the column with a .h file.
xls sheet is having only one spreadsheet. (2 Replies)
Hi everyone,
i am new to perl programming, i have a problem in extracting single column from csv file. the column is the 20th column,
please help me..
at present i use this code
#!C:/perl/bin
use warnings;
use strict;
my $file1 = $ARGV;
open FILE1, "<$file1"
or die "Can't... (13 Replies)
Hi,
I was doing some research and can't seem to find anything. I'm trying to automate a process by creating a script to read a csv line and column and assigning that value to a variable for the script to process it.
Also if you could tell me the line and column if it's on another work ... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying with the below Perl one-liner using regular expression to extract the first and second column of a text file:
perl -p -e "s/\s*(\w+).*/$1/"
perl -p -e "s/\s*.+\s(.+)\s*/$1\n/"
whereas the text file's data looks like:
Error: terminated 2233
Warning: reboot 3434
Warning:... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to extract first column from a file and redirect the output to another file in perl.
I am able to do this from command line by executing below commands.
perl -anle 'print $F' Input.dat > Output.dat
perl -ne '@F = split("\t", $_); print "$F\n";' Input.dat > Output.dat
perl -anE... (7 Replies)
In the below perl code I am using tags within each line to extract certain information. The tags that are used are:
STB >0.8 is STRAND BIAS otherwise GOOD
FDP is the second number
GO towards the end of the line is read into an array and the value returned is outputed, in the first line that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
viewperl
VIEWPERL(1) User Commands VIEWPERL(1)NAME
viewperl - quickly view syntax highlighted Perl code
SYNOPSIS
viewperl [OPTION]... FILE...
DESCRIPTION
View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted.
-c, --code=CODE
view CODE, syntax highlighted
-l, --lines
display line numbers
-L, --no-lines
supress display of line numbers (default)
-m, --module=FILE
consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name
-n, --name
display the name of each file (default)
-N, --no-name
supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset)
-p, --pod
display inline POD documentation (default)
-P, --no-pod
hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment)
-r, --reset
reset formatting and line numbers each file (default)
-R, --no-reset
supress resetting of formatting and line numbers
-s, --shift=WIDTH
set tab width (default is 4)
-t, --tabs
translate tabs into spaces (default)
-T, --no-tabs
supress translating of tabs into spaces
--help display this help and exit
Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example.
Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply.
View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted.
-c, --code=CODE
view CODE, syntax highlighted
-l, --lines
display line numbers
-L, --no-lines
supress display of line numbers (default)
-m, --module=FILE
consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name
-n, --name
display the name of each file (default)
-N, --no-name
supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset)
-p, --pod
display inline POD documentation (default)
-P, --no-pod
hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment)
-r, --reset
reset formatting and line numbers each file (default)
-R, --no-reset
supress resetting of formatting and line numbers
-s, --shift=WIDTH
set tab width (default is 4)
-t, --tabs
translate tabs into spaces (default)
-T, --no-tabs
supress translating of tabs into spaces
--help display this help and exit
Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example.
Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply.
viewperl August 2007 VIEWPERL(1)