Hi,
I have a file containing emails about some issues.
Using a bourne shell script, I need to extract the issue number from the URL's contained in the file (all URL's look like this : http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=1881) and then print out the issue number, status and... (2 Replies)
for example in my make file im building path from env variables and string but need to see what is did
what is the best way to print the result?
say I have in my Makefile :
exec_prefix = $(RUN_ENV_LOCAL)/apache
and I will like to print the exec_prefix value , how can it be done ? (1 Reply)
I already have accomplished this task using sed and arrays, but since I get the variable using awk, I figured I'd ask this question and maybe I can get a cleaner solution using strictly awk.. I just can't quite grasp it in awk.
Story: I'm automating the (re)configuration of network interfaces,... (3 Replies)
I have the following loop:
for I in `ldm ls |grep -v ^NAME| awk '{print $1}'`
do ldm ls -o network $I | echo $I | tr -s ' ' | cut -f6 -d " " | more +9
I would like the following displayed to a file:
The value of $I, followed by a newline, then the information from the rest of the... (3 Replies)
Hello, my problem is simple & I searched a lot but I couldn't find anything about it:
Basically I'd like to pass $i to a variable, $i being the positional variable; but it is unknown in the beginning so I can't do it like eg. myvar=$3, it HAS to be the "i"..
First, I tried myvar=$($i) ... (8 Replies)
Can anyone help me with how to print the variable using a awk statement.
for i in ` cat serverlist.txt ` ; do
my command | awk '{print $1 $2 $i}'
done
It should print like below but it is not
XXXXX YYYYY Servername
XXXXX YYYYY Servername
XXXXX YYYYY Servername
XXXXX YYYYY... (6 Replies)
my command
nawk -F' ' '{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++){if ($i ~ /XX/) print i}}' TOM.bk
The output is in two lines as below
12
30
i want the output in one line with comma delimited
as below
12,30
the 23 and 79 are column numbers in one line of the file.
so i want all the two columns... (1 Reply)
Der colleagues,
4 days I am trying to solve my issue and no success..
Maybe you can give me a clue how to achieve what I need..
So I have two files.
file1 example:
1_column1.1 1_column2.1 aaa 1_column4.1
1_column1.2 1_column2.2 ttt 1_column4.2
1_column1.3 1_column2.3 ... (10 Replies)
Hi
PRIM_SEQ=`some sql code`
and output of PRIM_SEQ is like below
120
130
STB_SEQ=`some sql code`
and output of STB_SEQ is like below
115
110
i need to compare this two variables output ( decimal numbers)
1) What I want to do is to compare every number in the PRIM_SEQ with... (8 Replies)
Hi,
Is there a special positional variables for when using the dot (.)?
Scripts are as below:
$: head -100 x.ksh /tmp/y.ksh
==> x.ksh <==
#!/bin/ksh
#
. /tmp/y.ksh 1234 abcd
echo "yvar1 = $yvar1"
echo "yvar2 = $yvar2"
==> /tmp/y.ksh <==
#!/bin/ksh (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
funcombine
funcombine(7) SAORD Documentation funcombine(7)NAME
FunCombine - Combining Region and Table Filters
SYNOPSIS
This document discusses the conventions for combining region and table filters, especially with regards to the comma operator.
DESCRIPTION
Comma Conventions
Filter specifications consist of a series of boolean expressions, separated by commas. These expressions can be table filters, spatial
region filters, or combinations thereof. Unfortunately, common usage requires that the comma operator must act differently in different
situations. Therefore, while its use is intuitive in most cases, commas can be a source of confusion.
According to long-standing usage in IRAF, when a comma separates two table filters, it takes on the meaning of a boolean and. Thus:
foo.fits[pha==1,pi==2]
is equivalent to:
foo.fits[pha==1 && pi==2]
When a comma separates two spatial region filters, however, it has traditionally taken on the meaning of a boolean or. Thus:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
is equivalent to:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3) || ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
(except that in the former case, each region is given a unique id in programs such as funcnts).
Region and table filters can be combined:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),pi=1:5]
or even:
foo.fits[pha==1&&circle(10,10,3),pi==2&&ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
In these cases, it is not obvious whether the command should utilize an or or and operator. We therefore arbitrarily chose to implement the
following rule:
o if both expressions contain a region, the operator used is or.
o if one (or both) expression(s) does not contain a region, the operator used is and.
This rule handles the cases of pure regions and pure column filters properly. It unambiguously assigns the boolean and to all mixed cases.
Thus:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),pi=1:5]
and
foo.fits[pi=1:5,circle(10,10,3)]
both are equivalent to:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3) && pi=1:5]
[NB: This arbitrary rule replaces the previous arbitrary rule (pre-funtools 1.2.3) which stated:
o if the 2nd expression contains a region, the operator used is or.
o if the 2nd expression does not contain a region, the operator used is and.
In that scenario, the or operator was implied by:
pha==4,circle 5 5 1
while the and operator was implied by
circle 5 5 1,pha==4
Experience showed that this non-commutative treatment of the comma operator was confusing and led to unexpected results.]
The comma rule must be considered provisional: comments and complaints are welcome to help clarify the matter. Better still, we recommend
that the comma operator be avoided in such cases in favor of an explicit boolean operator.
SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages
version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funcombine(7)