Hi ,
Can anybody explain how this perl one liner works..
It is to test whether the number is prime or not
perl -le 'print "PRIME" if (1 x shift) !~ /^(11+)\1+$/' 19
Thanks in advance
Shihab (2 Replies)
Hi
I need a perl onliner to delete a line in a file starting with few words.
Example
file.txt
----------
my name is don
I live in London
I am woking as engineer
I want to delete a line starting with 'I live in' using perl oneliner and in place edit with out temporary files
Thanks... (2 Replies)
Hi all!
How can a file be rid of three lines in sequence like the sample below:
...
</s>
<s>
<w></w>
</s>
<s>
...to get:
...
</s>
<s>
...
Note that the digits between square brackets may be more than one, comprising a comma, or a full-stop; and that the string between brackets... (1 Reply)
Thanks for giving your time and effort to answer questions and helping newbies like me understand awk.
I have a huge file, millions of lines, so perl takes quite a bit of time, I'd like to convert these perl one liners to awk.
Basically I'd like all lines with ISA sandwiched between... (9 Replies)
can someone help me translate the following command, from:
/usr/bin/awk "/^$TOFDAYM $TOFDAYD /,0" $LOGFILE
to something like
perl -e .....
basically, i want to use perl to do awk functions within a shell script. i want to do the above awk, using perl.
any suggestions? (9 Replies)
Not quite a unix question but problem in a perl command. Taking a chance if someone knows about the error
cat 1
a b c d
perl -p -e 's/a/b/g' 1
b b c d
What is the problem here??
perl -p -i -e 's/a/b/g' 1
Can't remove 1: Text file busy, skipping file. (2 Replies)
hi,
I am using PERL one liner for oracle database connection as :
$PERL -e "use DBI; DBI->connect(qw(DBI:Oracle:SID user passwd));"
is there a way to append select statement to this connection ? i.e. DB connection and select stmt in one line ?
how to do sysdba connection using one lines... (1 Reply)
PERLCC(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLCC(1)NAME
perlcc - generate executables from Perl programs
SYNOPSIS
$ perlcc hello # Compiles into executable 'a.out'
$ perlcc -o hello hello.pl # Compiles into executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -O file # Compiles using the optimised C backend
$ perlcc -B file # Compiles using the bytecode backend
$ perlcc -c file # Creates a C file, 'file.c'
$ perlcc -S -o hello file # Creates a C file, 'file.c',
# then compiles it to executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -c out.c file # Creates a C file, 'out.c' from 'file'
$ perlcc -e 'print q//' # Compiles a one-liner into 'a.out'
$ perlcc -c -e 'print q//' # Creates a C file 'a.out.c'
$ perlcc -I /foo hello # extra headers (notice the space after -I)
$ perlcc -L /foo hello # extra libraries (notice the space after -L)
$ perlcc -r hello # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
$ perlcc -r hello a b c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
# with arguments 'a b c'
$ perlcc hello -log c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out' logs compile
# log into 'c'.
DESCRIPTION
perlcc creates standalone executables from Perl programs, using the code generators provided by the B module. At present, you may either
create executable Perl bytecode, using the "-B" option, or generate and compile C files using the standard and 'optimised' C backends.
The code generated in this way is not guaranteed to work. The whole codegen suite ("perlcc" included) should be considered very experimen-
tal. Use for production purposes is strongly discouraged.
OPTIONS -Llibrary directories
Adds the given directories to the library search path when C code is passed to your C compiler.
-Iinclude directories
Adds the given directories to the include file search path when C code is passed to your C compiler; when using the Perl bytecode
option, adds the given directories to Perl's include path.
-o output file name
Specifies the file name for the final compiled executable.
-c C file name
Create C code only; do not compile to a standalone binary.
-e perl code
Compile a one-liner, much the same as "perl -e '...'"
-S Do not delete generated C code after compilation.
-B Use the Perl bytecode code generator.
-O Use the 'optimised' C code generator. This is more experimental than everything else put together, and the code created is not guaran-
teed to compile in finite time and memory, or indeed, at all.
-v Increase verbosity of output; can be repeated for more verbose output.
-r Run the resulting compiled script after compiling it.
-log
Log the output of compiling to a file rather than to stdout.
perl v5.8.9 2009-04-13 PERLCC(1)