I am writing script that will act like the 'comm' utility. My
problem is when trying to read whether the user has entered -123 or -1
or -1...etc.
I currently have:
if(m/??/g){
print "Good.\n";
}
So, this should check for all... (1 Reply)
Hello,
$line=USING (FILE '/TEST1/FILENAME'5000)
I want to reterive the value between ' and ) which is 5000 here.
i have tried out the following expressions ...
Type 1 : $Var1=`sed -e 's/.*\' //' -e 's\).*$/' $line`;
Type 2 : $Var1=`echo $line | awk -F"\'" '{print $2}' | awk -F"\\)"... (1 Reply)
Hello,
$line=USING (FILE '/TEST1/FILENAME'5000)
I want to reterive the value between ' and ) which is 5000 here.
i have tried out the following expressions ...
Type 1 : $Var1=`sed -e 's/.*\' //' -e 's\).*$/' $line`;
Type 2 : $Var1=`echo $line | awk -F"\'" '{print $2}' | awk -F"\\)"... (3 Replies)
Hello guys/gals,
i am sorry as this is probably very simply but i am slowly learning perl and need to convert some old korn shell scripts.
I need to be able to search a file line by line but only match a string at particular location on that line, for example character 20-30. So my file... (4 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I am trying to connect from hp-ux to win 2003 using perl's Net::Telnet module. Seeing the examples in couple of web sites, I saw I have to declare a Prompt =>
Can somebody please tell me what my regular expression should be? The prompt after I log in is:
...
login:... (1 Reply)
i have a set of regular expressions. The words in the regular expression should be used to replace the i/p with hyphens '---'. i need perl script to evaluate these regular expression. the words in the regexes when found in the i/p file should be replaced with hyphens '---'.
the set of regular... (3 Replies)
Hello all,
i am in a bit of dilema here. i dont know any thing about perl or python. only know a little bit of awk. now unable to take a decission as to which language to go for. my requirement is building a testing framework.suite which will execute ssytem comands remotely on unix... (2 Replies)
im trying to extract some tags between and in a file..for eg..the file format is
I want the and extracted from the file i.e the tags which is present b/w and
I have the regex for extracting the tags from the whole file but how to specify my search within the and... (1 Reply)
Hi Everybody!
I need some help with a regular expression in Perl that will match files named messages, but also files named message.1, message.2 and so on. So really I need one that will find messages and messages that might be followed by a period and a digit without matching other files like... (2 Replies)
Im looking for a bash solution that will use Regular Expressions (not perl, sed or awk) to check the example data below and then give me a status.
which would be just simply Match or Mismatch.
SYS PS1 is present.
Fan status: Normal
Input Voltage status: Normal
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: popeye
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
strtok_r
STRTOK(3) Linux Programmer's Manual STRTOK(3)NAME
strtok, strtok_r - extract tokens from strings
SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h>
char *strtok(char *str, const char *delim);
char *strtok_r(char *str, const char *delim, char **saveptr);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
strtok_r(): _SVID_SOURCE || _BSD_SOURCE || _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 1 || _XOPEN_SOURCE || _POSIX_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
The strtok() function parses a string into a sequence of tokens. On the first call to strtok() the string to be parsed should be specified
in str. In each subsequent call that should parse the same string, str should be NULL.
The delim argument specifies a set of bytes that delimit the tokens in the parsed string. The caller may specify different strings in
delim in successive calls that parse the same string.
Each call to strtok() returns a pointer to a null-terminated string containing the next token. This string does not include the delimiting
byte. If no more tokens are found, strtok() returns NULL.
A sequence of two or more contiguous delimiter bytes in the parsed string is considered to be a single delimiter. Delimiter bytes at the
start or end of the string are ignored. Put another way: the tokens returned by strtok() are always nonempty strings.
The strtok_r() function is a reentrant version strtok(). The saveptr argument is a pointer to a char * variable that is used internally by
strtok_r() in order to maintain context between successive calls that parse the same string.
On the first call to strtok_r(), str should point to the string to be parsed, and the value of saveptr is ignored. In subsequent calls,
str should be NULL, and saveptr should be unchanged since the previous call.
Different strings may be parsed concurrently using sequences of calls to strtok_r() that specify different saveptr arguments.
RETURN VALUE
The strtok() and strtok_r() functions return a pointer to the next token, or NULL if there are no more tokens.
CONFORMING TO
strtok()
SVr4, POSIX.1-2001, 4.3BSD, C89, C99.
strtok_r()
POSIX.1-2001.
BUGS
Be cautious when using these functions. If you do use them, note that:
* These functions modify their first argument.
* These functions cannot be used on constant strings.
* The identity of the delimiting byte is lost.
* The strtok() function uses a static buffer while parsing, so it's not thread safe. Use strtok_r() if this matters to you.
EXAMPLE
The program below uses nested loops that employ strtok_r() to break a string into a two-level hierarchy of tokens. The first command-line
argument specifies the string to be parsed. The second argument specifies the delimiter byte(s) to be used to separate that string into
"major" tokens. The third argument specifies the delimiter byte(s) to be used to separate the "major" tokens into subtokens.
An example of the output produced by this program is the following:
$ ./a.out 'a/bbb///cc;xxx:yyy:' ':;' '/'
1: a/bbb///cc
--> a
--> bbb
--> cc
2: xxx
--> xxx
3: yyy
--> yyy
Program source
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
char *str1, *str2, *token, *subtoken;
char *saveptr1, *saveptr2;
int j;
if (argc != 4) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s string delim subdelim
",
argv[0]);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
for (j = 1, str1 = argv[1]; ; j++, str1 = NULL) {
token = strtok_r(str1, argv[2], &saveptr1);
if (token == NULL)
break;
printf("%d: %s
", j, token);
for (str2 = token; ; str2 = NULL) {
subtoken = strtok_r(str2, argv[3], &saveptr2);
if (subtoken == NULL)
break;
printf(" --> %s
", subtoken);
}
}
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
Another example program using strtok() can be found in getaddrinfo_a(3).
SEE ALSO index(3), memchr(3), rindex(3), strchr(3), string(3), strpbrk(3), strsep(3), strspn(3), strstr(3), wcstok(3)COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU 2012-05-10 STRTOK(3)