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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Displaying a field completely Post 302579964 by polavan on Wednesday 7th of December 2011 05:54:57 AM
Old 12-07-2011
Displaying a field completely

Version: AIX 6.1 (korn shell)

In the below output, the field with the heading 'Address' has some names like
HTML Code:
hwproc214-priv1.gnas.wrd.net
which are only partially displayed.

HTML Code:
$ netstat -i
Name  Mtu   Network     Address           Ipkts Ierrs    Opkts Oerrs  Coll
en2   1500  link#2      ba.f0.10.7e.23.12  2850803     0  1917922     0     0
en2   1500  172.20.207  hwproc214-priv1.  2850803     0  1917922     0     0
en2   1500  169.254     169.254.115.157   2850803     0  1917922     0     0
en5   1500  link#3      hwproc218-priv1.  2851261     0  1917876     0     0
.
.
.


To displayed the 'Adress' field (the fourth one) , i tried

HTML Code:
$ netstat -i| cut -d: -f4
But it just gave the same output as above. I want the 'Adress' field (fourth one) to be displayed completely. How can I do this?
 

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HTML::Filter(3) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   HTML::Filter(3)

NAME
HTML::Filter - Filter HTML text through the parser NOTE
This module is deprecated. The "HTML::Parser" now provides the functionally of "HTML::Filter" much more efficiently with the the "default" handler. SYNOPSIS
require HTML::Filter; $p = HTML::Filter->new->parse_file("index.html"); DESCRIPTION
"HTML::Filter" is an HTML parser that by default prints the original text of each HTML element (a slow version of cat(1) basically). The callback methods may be overridden to modify the filtering for some HTML elements and you can override output() method which is called to print the HTML text. "HTML::Filter" is a subclass of "HTML::Parser". This means that the document should be given to the parser by calling the $p->parse() or $p->parse_file() methods. EXAMPLES
The first example is a filter that will remove all comments from an HTML file. This is achieved by simply overriding the comment method to do nothing. package CommentStripper; require HTML::Filter; @ISA=qw(HTML::Filter); sub comment { } # ignore comments The second example shows a filter that will remove any <TABLE>s found in the HTML file. We specialize the start() and end() methods to count table tags and then make output not happen when inside a table. package TableStripper; require HTML::Filter; @ISA=qw(HTML::Filter); sub start { my $self = shift; $self->{table_seen}++ if $_[0] eq "table"; $self->SUPER::start(@_); } sub end { my $self = shift; $self->SUPER::end(@_); $self->{table_seen}-- if $_[0] eq "table"; } sub output { my $self = shift; unless ($self->{table_seen}) { $self->SUPER::output(@_); } } If you want to collect the parsed text internally you might want to do something like this: package FilterIntoString; require HTML::Filter; @ISA=qw(HTML::Filter); sub output { push(@{$_[0]->{fhtml}}, $_[1]) } sub filtered_html { join("", @{$_[0]->{fhtml}}) } SEE ALSO
HTML::Parser COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1997-1999 Gisle Aas. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.18.2 2013-03-25 HTML::Filter(3)
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