How is it possible under UNIX to restrain the number of digits of the PID number?
For instance, we have a product that generates a PID of 7 digits, and we would like to have only 6 digits maximum instead for the PID.
Thank you for your help. (1 Reply)
Hi all
Can anybody suggest me, how to get the count of digits in a word
I tried
WORD=abcd1234
echo $WORD | grep -oE ] | wc -l
4
It works in bash command line, but not in scripts :mad: (12 Replies)
Hi all,
there is a data in a file wich loks likes
00:00:49|24.48|
00:01:49|22.83|
00:02:49|22.07|
00:03:49|20.72|
00:04:49|21.28|
00:05:49|21.22|
00:06:49|21.38|
00:07:49|20.93|
00:08:49|21.27|
00:09:49|20.65|
00:10:49|19.42|
00:11:49|21.93|
00:12:49|20.62|
00:13:49|20.23|... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I am new here and generally not experienced with linux. My question must be easy, but as for now I have no idea how to do it.
I have lots of directories with numerical names, e.g. 50 50.1 50.12 etc. What I want is to leave directories with no or single digit after the decimal... (2 Replies)
please help me write a perl program to find the difference of 1 and zeros of a 6 digit binary number.
eg If input is 111100 expected output +2
if input is 000011 expected output -2
input is 000111 expected output 0 (2 Replies)
HI all,
I have output of something like this:
crab: ExitCodes Summary
>>>>>>>>> 12 Jobs with Wrapper Exit Code : 50117
List of jobs: 1-12
See https:///twiki/something/ for Exit Code meaning
crab: ExitCodes Summary
>>>>>>>>> 5 Jobs with Wrapper Exit Code : 8001
List of... (20 Replies)
I have input file like below,
201424|9999|OSS|622010|RGT|00378228764
201424|8888|OM|587079|RGT|00284329675
201424|7777|OM|587076|RGT|00128671024
201424|6666|OM|581528|RGT|00113552084
Output should be like below, should add decimal (.) from last 4 digits.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vinothsekark
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xpacmdnew
xpacmdnew(3) SAORD Documentation xpacmdnew(3)NAME
XPACmdNew - create a new XPA public access point for commands
SYNOPSIS
#include <xpa.h>
XPA XPACmdNew(char *class, char *name);
DESCRIPTION
Create a new XPA public access point for commands that will share a common identifier class:name. Enter this access point into the XPA name
server, so that it can be accessed by external processes. XPACmdNew() returns an XPA struct.
It often is more convenient to have one public access point that can manage a number of commands, rather than having individual access
points for each command. For example, it is easier to command the ds9 image display using:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset ds9
echo "scale log" | xpaset ds9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset ds9
then to use:
echo "I8" | xpaset ds9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset ds9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset ds9_file
In the first case, the commands remain the same regardless of the target XPA name. In the second case, the command names must change for
each instance of ds9. That is, if a second instance of ds9 called DS9 were running, it would be commanded either as:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset DS9
echo "scale log" | xpaset DS9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset DS9
or as:
echo "I8" | xpaset DS9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset DS9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset DS9_file
Thus, in cases where a program is going to manage many commands, it generally is easier to define them as commands associated with the
XPACmdNew() routine, rather than as separate access points using XPANew().
When XPACmdNew() is called, only the class:name identifier is specified. Each sub-command is subsequently defined using the XPACmdAdd()
routine.
SEE ALSO
See xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages
version 2.1.14 June 7, 2012 xpacmdnew(3)