Is there a way to get echo to make newlines without using any type of quotes? I've done a lot of searches and went into my Linux book to no avail. I'm trying to write five separate lines to a file. I can get echo to accept all five lines like this
echo \
\this is line 1\
\this is line 2\ >... (6 Replies)
So in my shell i execute:
{ while true; do echo string; sleep 1; done } | read line This waits one second and returns.
But
{ while true; do /bin/echo string; sleep 1; done } | read line continues to run, and doesn't stop until i kill it explicitly.
I have tried this in bash as well as zsh,... (2 Replies)
Bit of a weird one i suppose, i want to use an echo inside an echo... For example...
i have a script that i want to use to take users input and create another script. Inside this script it creates it also needs to use echos...
echo "echo "hello"" >$file
echo "echo "goodbye"" >$file
... (3 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I need to print a value in the same line , But when we use the echo instead the loops (while), the value goes to the next line..
Can you help me in this..
Thanks For your help in advance. (6 Replies)
echo `echo ` doesn't echoes anything. And it's logic. But
echo `echo `echo ` ` does echoes "echo". What's the logic of it? the `echo `echo ` inside of the whole (first) echo, echoes nothing, so the first echo have to echo nothing but echoes "echo"
(too much echoing :P):o (2 Replies)
I came across and unexpected behavior with redirections in tcsh. I know, csh is not best for redirections, but I'd like to understand what is happening here.
I have following script (called out_to_streams.csh):
#!/bin/tcsh -f
echo Redirected to STDOUT > /dev/stdout
echo Redirected to... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I'm working with ksh.
I was working with the echo command
That is
echo "Today is $date"
which would show for example
Toady is 7/12/12
which was fine
however, know I only recieve the first part of the echo without the date.
Today is
Could I have edited the echo... (9 Replies)
Hi guys,
Been messing around with shell programming for a couple of days and I found something that was pretty odd in the behavior of the echo command. Below is an example-:
When I type the following in my /home directory from my lxterminal in Debian-:
echo "`ls -l`"
I get the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreyan32
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
transliterator.transliterate
TRANSLITERATOR.TRANSLITERATE(3) 1 TRANSLITERATOR.TRANSLITERATE(3)Transliterator::transliterate - Transliterate a string
Object oriented style
SYNOPSIS
public string Transliterator::transliterate (string $subject, [int $start], [int $end])
DESCRIPTION
Procedural style
transliterator_transliterate (mixed $transliterator, string $subject, [int $start], [int $end])
Transforms a string or part thereof using an ICU transliterator.
PARAMETERS
o $transliterator
- In the procedural version, either a Transliterator or a string from which a Transliterator can be built.
o $subject
- The string to be transformed.
o $start
- The start index (in UTF-16 code units) from which the string will start to be transformed, inclusive. Indexing starts at 0. The
text before will be left as is.
o $end
- The end index (in UTF-16 code units) until which the string will be transformed, exclusive. Indexing starts at 0. The text after
will be left as is.
RETURN VALUES
The transfomed string on success, or FALSE on failure.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
Converting escaped UTF-16 code units
<?php
$s = "u304Au65E9u3046u3054u3056u3044u307Eu3059";
echo transliterator_transliterate("Hex-Any/Java", $s), "
";
//now the reverse operation with a supplementary character
$supplChar = html_entity_decode('𝄞');
echo mb_strlen($supplChar, "UTF-8"), "
";
$encSupplChar = transliterator_transliterate("Any-Hex/Java", $supplChar);
//echoes two encoded UTF-16 code units
echo $encSupplChar, "
";
//and back
echo transliterator_transliterate("Hex-Any/Java", $encSupplChar), "
";
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
1
uD834uDD1E
SEE ALSO
Transliterator::getErrorMessage, Transliterator::__construct.
PHP Documentation Group TRANSLITERATOR.TRANSLITERATE(3)