i have this script that searches for a pattern.
However it fails if the pattern includes some
special characters. So far, it fails with the
following strings:
1. -Cr
2. $Mj
3. H'412
would a sed or awk be more effective?
i don't want the users to put the (\)
during the search (they... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
How do I extract a value without special characters? I need to extract the value of %Used from below and if its greater than 80, need to send a notification.
I am doing this right now..Its giving 17%..Is there a way to extract the value and assign it to a variable in one step?
df |grep... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
We are facing the following problem in our HP-UX machine: software that manipulates utf-8 encoded strings (e.g. during string cut), fails to correctly manipulate strings (all containing Greek characters) that contain special characters like @, &, # etc. Actually, in different... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a CSV file in which some fields contains special character for ex:-
my file is file 1
cat file1
abcd,bgfht,ngbht,abvc ****
hdlld,hsgdt,bhfy,knht ****
whenever i am trying to put a 4th feild in a variable its giving me list of all the files i have in current... (6 Replies)
I'm using awk '{print $1}' and it works most of the time to print the contents of a mysql query loop, but occationally I get a field with some special character in it, is there a way to tell awk to ignore all special characters between my FS? I have >186K records, so building a list of ALL special... (6 Replies)
Hi Experts.
I'm stuck with the below AWK code where i'm trying to move the records containing any special characters in the last field to a bad file.
awk -F, '{if ($NF ~ /^|^/) print >"goodfile";else print >"badfile"}' filename
sample data
1,abc,def,1234,A *
2,bed,dec,342,* A ... (6 Replies)
grep -i "$line,$opline" COMBO_JUNK|awk -F, '
{
C4+=$4
}
{
}
END {
print C4
}
' OFS=,`
when i run this command in the script.... it o/p all the value as 0 if $line contains any special parameters.....
but the same script if i run in command prompt... it shows... (4 Replies)
This is really frustrating because I can't figure it out.
I'm running a health check script. One of the items I'm checking is the amount of memory on a server. I use the free command, which outputs something like this (excerpt)
Mem: 100 100 100 100
Swap: 100 100 100 100
In my debugging... (5 Replies)
Hello Folks,
Need to bisect strings based on a subset.
Below works good.
echo /a/b/c/d | awk -F"/c/d$" '{print $1}'
/a/b
However, it goes awry with special characters.
echo /a/b/c+/d | awk -F"/c+/d$" '{print $1}'
/a/b/c+/d
Desired output:
/a/b
Escaping the special characters... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: vibhor_agarwali
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
erl_comment_scan
erl_comment_scan(3erl) Erlang Module Definition erl_comment_scan(3erl)NAME
erl_comment_scan - Functions for reading comment lines from Erlang source code.
DESCRIPTION
Functions for reading comment lines from Erlang source code.
DATA TYPES
comment() = {integer(), integer(), integer(), [string()]} :
EXPORTS
file(FileName::filename() (see module file)) -> [Comment]
Types Comment = {Line, Column, Indentation, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indentation = integer()
Text = [string()]
Extracts comments from an Erlang source code file. Returns a list of entries representing multi-line comments, listed in order of
increasing line-numbers. For each entry, Text is a list of strings representing the consecutive comment lines in top-down order; the
strings contain all characters following (but not including) the first comment-introducing % character on the line, up to (but not
including) the line-terminating newline.
Furthermore, Line is the line number and Column the left column of the comment (i.e., the column of the comment-introducing % char-
acter). Indent is the indentation (or padding), measured in character positions between the last non-whitespace character before the
comment (or the left margin), and the left column of the comment. Line and Column are always positive integers, and Indentation is a
nonnegative integer.
Evaluation exits with reason {read, Reason} if a read error occurred, where Reason is an atom corresponding to a Posix error code;
see the module file(3erl) for details.
join_lines(Lines::[CommentLine]) -> [Comment]
Types CommentLine = {Line, Column, Indent, string()}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indent = integer()
Comment = {Line, Column, Indent, Text}
Text = [string()]
Joins individual comment lines into multi-line comments. The input is a list of entries representing individual comment lines, in
order of decreasing line-numbers ; see scan_lines/1 for details. The result is a list of entries representing multi-line comments,
still listed in order of decreasing line-numbers , but where for each entry, Text is a list of consecutive comment lines in order of
increasing line-numbers (i.e., top-down).
See also: scan_lines/1 .
scan_lines(Text::string()) -> [CommentLine]
Types CommentLine = {Line, Column, Indent, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indent = integer()
Text = string()
Extracts individual comment lines from a source code string. Returns a list of comment lines found in the text, listed in order of
decreasing line-numbers, i.e., the last comment line in the input is first in the resulting list. Text is a single string, contain-
ing all characters following (but not including) the first comment-introducing % character on the line, up to (but not including)
the line-terminating newline. For details on Line , Column and Indent , see file/1 .
string(Text::string()) -> [Comment]
Types Comment = {Line, Column, Indentation, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indentation = integer()
Text = [string()]
Extracts comments from a string containing Erlang source code. Except for reading directly from a string, the behaviour is the same
as for file/1 .
See also: file/1 .
AUTHORS
Richard Carlsson <richardc@it.uu.se >
syntax_tools 1.6.7 erl_comment_scan(3erl)