hello
whats the difference between excuting a shell script as
a)sh myscript.sh
b). ./myscript.sh
i noticed that my shell script works fine when i run it as . ./myscript
.sh but fails when i run it as sh myscript.sh could anybody explain why.
the shell script is very simple
... (9 Replies)
Ho do I find out the verion of the Kron shell on my client`s system ?
There is no one to ask. They are not knowledged enough (hard to believe but yes).
Also, on that AIX 4.2, I am trying to figure out how to do a grep using a search patter like below but does not seam to work. The '*' do... (11 Replies)
Hello,
I am a bit puzzled by the way my shell treats spaces in filenames.
An example will be way clearer than any explanation I can make:
$ ls test\ file\ with\ spaces
test file with spaces
$ var="test\ file\ with\ spaces"
$ echo $var
test\ file\ with\ spaces
$ ls $var
ls: cannot... (4 Replies)
In a Korn shell script I have,
cat ../header | sed -e 's/flag1/$cnumb/g' > header.txt
The header is short
{{Company flag1}}
But the result in header.txt is
{{Company $cnumb}}
The value of $cnumb is 120. I am trying to get the value of $cnumb into the header.
I have tried /'$cnumb'/g,... (10 Replies)
Hi
Don't know if this is a dummy question, but let's give it a try.
I yesterday had a problem with undefined behaviour in the sort shell command (I'm using bash), leading to different sort orders without apparent reasons. I resolved this by typing
export LC_ALL="C"
export LC_COLLATE="C"... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
Can someone point me in the right direction for a manual on the various statement options for 'if'. Basically I have a piece of code which says:
if ]
and I wondered what the -f was. I know the '!' means not equal..
As usual any help much appreciated.. (5 Replies)
Guys, please help! I am currently using an AIX server however whenever I tried to use the typeset -F3, the variable is resulting with a "#".
In the given example below, I declared x to be a decimal holding 3 decimal places = 1.455. However whenever I tried to echo the $x, the resulting value... (9 Replies)
Hello all. This is my first post/question on this site.
I’m a new Systems Analyst with previous experience with BASH. Although now I'm using AIX, and I’m trying to get a feel for the Korn shell (for those of you that don’t know AIX only uses the KORN shell).
I hope I put this into the correct... (10 Replies)
Hi there.
I'm facing a strange & an intriguing behaviour with sed while replacing the tab character with a space reading from a file. It randomly works sometimes but mostly doesn't work.
Below is what's happening-
<tab> here is the actual literal tab.
user1> cat temp2
1<tab>2<tab>3 4... (2 Replies)
Can someone please explain the strange behaviour.. I was just trying a few things to learn awk..
in the below code when I start the braces in the same line, the output is as expected, when I start at next line, output is displayed twice.
Please see the file, code I tried and output below.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kulasekar
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
line
line(1) General Commands Manual line(1)NAME
line - Reads one line from standard input
SYNOPSIS
line
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
line: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
None
DESCRIPTION
The line command copies one line, up to and including a newline, from standard input and writes it to standard output. Use this command
within a shell command file to read from your terminal. The line command always writes at least a newline character.
NOTES
The line utility has no internationalization features and is marked LEGACY in XCU Issue 5. Use the read utility instead.
EXIT STATUS
Success. End-of-File.
EXAMPLES
To read a line from the keyboard and append it to a file, enter: echo 'Enter comments for the log:' echo ': c' line >>log
This shell procedure displays the message: Enter comments for the log:
It then reads a line of text from the keyboard and adds it to the end of the file log. The echo ': c' command displays a : (colon)
prompt. See the echo command for information about the c escape sequence.
SEE ALSO
Commands: echo(1), ksh(1), read(1), Bourne shell sh(1b), POSIX shell sh(1p)
Functions: read(2)
Standards: standards(5)line(1)