Hi,
Sorry for silly question, but I'm trying to write a perl script to operate a log file that is in following format:
(4)ab=1234/(10)bc=abcdef9876/cd=0....
The number in the brackets is the lenghts of the field, "/" is the field separator. Brackets are not leading every field.
What I'm... (9 Replies)
Hi guys, I'm new to this forum and I'm not a UNIX expert. I can't figure out this certain problem i'm having:
I need to sort some words, some of the words are annotations (enclosed within < and >). I need to have them sorted alphabetically with all non-alphanumeric characters up front. For... (2 Replies)
Here is my problem.
I have a list of phone numbers that I want to use only the last 4 digits as PINs for something I am working on. I have all the numbers in a file but now I want to be removed all items EXCEPT the last 4 digits.
I have seen sed commands and some grep commands but I am... (10 Replies)
hello, I'm trying to write the fastest sed command possible (large files will be processed) to replace RICH with NICK in a file which looks like this (below) if the occurance of RICH is uppercase, replace with uppercase if it's lowercase, replace with lowercase
SOMTHING_RICH_SOMTHING <- replace... (10 Replies)
Hi!
Could anyone so kindly help me a code to eliminate from a txt file, obtained by collecting and merge several web-page, every word (string) containing non alphabetical, numeric and punctuation character (i.e NON a-zA-Z0-9, underscore and punctuation mark)?
Thanks a lot for the help to... (5 Replies)
I am trying to analyse a large file of sequencing data, example of first 10 lines below,
@HWUSI-EAS656_0044_FC:7:1:2447:1039#GCAATT/1
GNCTATGGCTTGCCGGGCTCAGGGAAGACAATCATAGCCATGAAAATCATGGAAAAGATCAGAAAAACATTTCAA
+HWUSI-EAS656_0044_FC:7:1:2447:1039#GCAATT/1... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am new to Sed and would like to know if it is possible to remove the characters .
I have a couple of files with a keyword and would like to remove the substring.
I am Using sed s/// but Its not working
Thanks for your Support
Andrew Borg (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file with this line, it's always in the first line:
I want to remove these special characters: ´╗┐
file1
´╗┐\\bar\c$\test2\;3.348.118 Bytes;160 ;3
\\bar\c$\test\;35 Bytes;2 ;1
I want the same file to be only
\\bar\c$\test2\;3.348.118 Bytes;160 ;3
\\bar\c$\test\;35... (4 Replies)
Hello!
I know that this expression gets rid of non-alphanumeric characters:
sed 's///g'
and I understand that it is replacing them with nothing - hence the '//'-, but I don't understand how it's doing it.
It seems it's finding strings that begin with alphanumeric and replacing them with... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want a script of a code that will allow me to generate all possible combinations of alphanumberica characters of length 12 such that each string will contain numbers and either small or capital letters.
For example a string may look like this: 123AB45cd678. (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: faizlo
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
shell-quote
SHELL-QUOTE(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation SHELL-QUOTE(1p)NAME
shell-quote - quote arguments for safe use, unmodified in a shell command
SYNOPSIS
shell-quote [switch]... arg...
DESCRIPTION
shell-quote lets you pass arbitrary strings through the shell so that they won't be changed by the shell. This lets you process commands
or files with embedded white space or shell globbing characters safely. Here are a few examples.
EXAMPLES
ssh preserving args
When running a remote command with ssh, ssh doesn't preserve the separate arguments it receives. It just joins them with spaces and
passes them to "$SHELL -c". This doesn't work as intended:
ssh host touch 'hi there' # fails
It creates 2 files, hi and there. Instead, do this:
cmd=`shell-quote touch 'hi there'`
ssh host "$cmd"
This gives you just 1 file, hi there.
process find output
It's not ordinarily possible to process an arbitrary list of files output by find with a shell script. Anything you put in $IFS to
split up the output could legitimately be in a file's name. Here's how you can do it using shell-quote:
eval set -- `find -type f -print0 | xargs -0 shell-quote --`
debug shell scripts
shell-quote is better than echo for debugging shell scripts.
debug() {
[ -z "$debug" ] || shell-quote "debug:" "$@"
}
With echo you can't tell the difference between "debug 'foo bar'" and "debug foo bar", but with shell-quote you can.
save a command for later
shell-quote can be used to build up a shell command to run later. Say you want the user to be able to give you switches for a command
you're going to run. If you don't want the switches to be re-evaluated by the shell (which is usually a good idea, else there are
things the user can't pass through), you can do something like this:
user_switches=
while [ $# != 0 ]
do
case x$1 in
x--pass-through)
[ $# -gt 1 ] || die "need an argument for $1"
user_switches="$user_switches "`shell-quote -- "$2"`
shift;;
# process other switches
esac
shift
done
# later
eval "shell-quote some-command $user_switches my args"
OPTIONS --debug
Turn debugging on.
--help
Show the usage message and die.
--version
Show the version number and exit.
AVAILABILITY
The code is licensed under the GNU GPL. Check http://www.argon.org/~roderick/ or CPAN for updated versions.
AUTHOR
Roderick Schertler <roderick@argon.org>
perl v5.8.4 2005-05-03 SHELL-QUOTE(1p)