Hello,
I have records like below that I want to remove any five characters from the end of the string before the double quotes unless it is only an asterik.
I don't care what the characters are, but I need to retain the double quotes after I remove them. Can you point me to some examples of how to accomplish this? Thank you.
I am writing a script to search PCL output and append more PCL data to the end accordingly.
I need to remove the last 88 bytes from the string.
I have searched for a few hours now and am coming up with nothing. I can't use head or tail because the PCL output is all on one line. awk crashes on... (3 Replies)
I need help to strip out the first two characters of the variable $FileName. Please help.
FileName=`find . -mtime +0 -name '*'`
Contents of variable $FileName:
./SRIZVI4.MCR_IDEAS_REPORT.LAST.052705.075405.csv
I want to strip out "./" and place the contents in another variable. How do I... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I need to delete the final few characters from a parameter leaving just the first few. However, the characters which need to remain will not always be a string of the same length.
For instance, the parameter will be passed as BN_HSBC_NTRS/hub_mth_ifce.sf. I only need the bit before the... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have a file which contains wrong XML, There are some garbage characters at the end of line that I want to get rid of. Example:
<request type="product" ><attributes><pair><name>q</name><value><!]></value></pair><pair><name>start</name><value>1</value></pair></attributes></request>�J ... (7 Replies)
Hello All,
I have an Expect script that ssh's to a remote server and runs some commands before exiting.
One of the commands I run is the "hostname" Command. After I run this command I save the output
using this line in the code below...
Basically it executes the hostname command, then I... (2 Replies)
Hi all.. I have several unique files that contain one thing in common, and that is acct#. For all files in the directory, I want to append the 10 characters following the word "ACCOUNT:" to the end of the filename.
for example:
I have file 111_123 that contains ACCOUNT:ABC1234567
The file... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to remove lines once a string is found till another string is found including the start string and end string. I want to basically grab all the lines starting with color (closing bracket). PS: The line after the closing bracket for color could be anything (currently 'more').... (1 Reply)
Hello.
The token is any printable characters between 2 " .
The token is unknown, but we know that it is between 2 "
Tok 1 : "1234x567"
Tok 2 : "A3b6+None"
Tok 3 : "A3b6!1234=@"
The ligne is :
Line 1 :
"9876xABCDE"Do you have any code fragments or data samples in your post
Line 2 : ... (3 Replies)
Hi,
So basically I have this file containing query output in seperated columns.
In particular column I have the below strings:
news
news-prio
I am trying to grep the string news without listing news-prio aswell.
I tried
grep "$MSG_TYPE" ,
grep -w "$MSG_TYPE" ,
grep... (4 Replies)
I have this fastq file:
@M04961:22:000000000-B5VGJ:1:1101:9280:7106 1:N:0:86
GGGGGGGGGGGGCATGAAAACATACAAACCGTCTTTCCAGAAATTGTTCCAAGTATCGGCAACAGCTTTATCAATACCATGAAAAATATCAACCACACCA
+test-1
GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGCCGGGGGFF,EDFFGEDFG,@DGGCGGEGGG7DCGGGF68CGFFFGGGG@CGDGFFDFEFEFF:30CGAFFDFEFF8CAF;;8... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Xterra
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
text::parsewords
Text::ParseWords(3perl) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Text::ParseWords(3perl)NAME
Text::ParseWords - parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays
SYNOPSIS
use Text::ParseWords;
@lists = nested_quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines);
@words = quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines);
@words = shellwords(@lines);
@words = parse_line($delim, $keep, $line);
@words = old_shellwords(@lines); # DEPRECATED!
DESCRIPTION
The &nested_quotewords() and "ewords() functions accept a delimiter (which can be a regular expression) and a list of lines and then
breaks those lines up into a list of words ignoring delimiters that appear inside quotes. "ewords() returns all of the tokens in a
single long list, while &nested_quotewords() returns a list of token lists corresponding to the elements of @lines. &parse_line() does
tokenizing on a single string. The &*quotewords() functions simply call &parse_line(), so if you're only splitting one line you can call
&parse_line() directly and save a function call.
The $keep argument is a boolean flag. If true, then the tokens are split on the specified delimiter, but all other characters (quotes,
backslashes, etc.) are kept in the tokens. If $keep is false then the &*quotewords() functions remove all quotes and backslashes that are
not themselves backslash-escaped or inside of single quotes (i.e., "ewords() tries to interpret these characters just like the Bourne
shell). NB: these semantics are significantly different from the original version of this module shipped with Perl 5.000 through 5.004.
As an additional feature, $keep may be the keyword "delimiters" which causes the functions to preserve the delimiters in each string as
tokens in the token lists, in addition to preserving quote and backslash characters.
&shellwords() is written as a special case of "ewords(), and it does token parsing with whitespace as a delimiter-- similar to most
Unix shells.
EXAMPLES
The sample program:
use Text::ParseWords;
@words = quotewords('s+', 0, q{this is "a test" of quotewords "for you});
$i = 0;
foreach (@words) {
print "$i: <$_>
";
$i++;
}
produces:
0: <this>
1: <is>
2: <a test>
3: <of quotewords>
4: <"for>
5: <you>
demonstrating:
0 a simple word
1 multiple spaces are skipped because of our $delim
2 use of quotes to include a space in a word
3 use of a backslash to include a space in a word
4 use of a backslash to remove the special meaning of a double-quote
5 another simple word (note the lack of effect of the backslashed double-quote)
Replacing "quotewords('s+', 0, q{this is...})" with "shellwords(q{this is...})" is a simpler way to accomplish the same thing.
AUTHORS
Maintainer: Alexandr Ciornii <alexchornyATgmail.com>.
Previous maintainer: Hal Pomeranz <pomeranz@netcom.com>, 1994-1997 (Original author unknown). Much of the code for &parse_line()
(including the primary regexp) from Joerk Behrends <jbehrends@multimediaproduzenten.de>.
Examples section another documentation provided by John Heidemann <johnh@ISI.EDU>
Bug reports, patches, and nagging provided by lots of folks-- thanks everybody! Special thanks to Michael Schwern <schwern@envirolink.org>
for assuring me that a &nested_quotewords() would be useful, and to Jeff Friedl <jfriedl@yahoo-inc.com> for telling me not to worry about
error-checking (sort of-- you had to be there).
perl v5.14.2 2010-12-30 Text::ParseWords(3perl)