Hi guys;
I want to show what am I doing on a terminal into another. I did something close but its not working really good.
Example: cat /dev/pts/12 >/dev/pts/13
where 12 is my terminal and 13 its the other terminal.
This is usefull for me to share my small unix knowledge to other people... (4 Replies)
Hi,
How to achieve this? Let us assume the following:
There are 2 scripts a.ksh and b.ksh
$ cat a.ksh
sh b.sh 2>&1 >> /work/log/a_log.txt
$ cat b.sh
echo "abcd"
My requirement is, is there a way to display this abcd in standard output also alongside of writing into a_log.txt?... (8 Replies)
Hi all
I would like to open a SQL session from within a shell script and then redirect the output of the SQL command to a file.
e.g.
#!/bin/bash
sqlplus "/ as sysdba" <<EOF
@$HOME/recovery_space.sql
EOF
I want to redirect the output of the SQL command to a temp file, because... (2 Replies)
i wanted to execute some terminal commands on local linux, parse their output and display it to the user, i checked netcat source code but i couldnt understance it since im new to c (and linux at the same time).
so i was wondering if there is away to run an instance of terminal hidden, read and... (15 Replies)
Hi,
I want to redirect my script output to more than one file without printing the result to the screen. How to do that?
ex:
echo "hi" >> a.txt b.txt
cat a.txt
hi b.txt
:confused: (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to save the whole Output of the terminal in a file. I dont want to redirect a single command to a file (ls -l > test.txt), I want to redirect the whole last 40 lines into a file.
Maybe i can read out the terminal while working with it, but i cant find a way to save the whole... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I am interested in taking the output from a script i wrote and using it as input to a different script i wrote. So for example i want to take the output from program2 and use it as a parameter for program1. I didnt think i could use the >> symbols because i think that is just for .txt... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to redirect output for every line in a korn shell script that is going to generate output and append it to a log file.
I have been doing this after EACH and every line that is going to produce output:
command 1 >> test.log
command 2 >> test.log
command 3 >>... (5 Replies)
Hello All,
I have some unique requirement.
I have written a very lengthy script which calls number of resource script to execute a particular task.
What I want is output of each command(called from main script and resource scripts) should go to a... (3 Replies)
when i do something like this:
bona=$(echo hi2 > /dev/pts/1 ; printf '%s\n' "" | sed '/^$/d')
i get:
hi2
and the $bona variable is empty, when I run:
echo ${bona}
i get the result "hi2" outside of the variable. I want it stored in the bona variable with nothing outputted to the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
locale::language
Locale::Language(3perl) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Locale::Language(3perl)NAME
Locale::Language - standard codes for language identification
SYNOPSIS
use Locale::Language;
$lang = code2language('en'); # $lang gets 'English'
$code = language2code('French'); # $code gets 'fr'
@codes = all_language_codes();
@names = all_language_names();
DESCRIPTION
The "Locale::Language" module provides access to standard codes used for identifying languages, such as those as defined in ISO 639.
Most of the routines take an optional additional argument which specifies the code set to use. If not specified, the default ISO 639 two-
letter codes will be used.
SUPPORTED CODE SETS
There are several different code sets you can use for identifying languages. The ones currently supported are:
alpha-2
This is the set of two-letter (lowercase) codes from ISO 639, such as 'he' for Hebrew.
This code set is identified with the symbol "LOCALE_LANG_ALPHA_2".
This is the default code set.
alpha-3
This is the set of three-letter (lowercase) bibliographic codes from ISO 639, such as 'heb' for Hebrew.
This code set is identified with the symbol "LOCALE_LANG_ALPHA_3".
term
This is the set of three-letter (lowercase) terminologic codes from ISO 639.
This code set is identified with the symbol "LOCALE_LANG_TERM".
ROUTINES
code2language ( CODE [,CODESET] )
language2code ( NAME [,CODESET] )
language_code2code ( CODE ,CODESET ,CODESET2 )
all_language_codes ( [CODESET] )
all_language_names ( [CODESET] )
Locale::Language::rename_language ( CODE ,NEW_NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Language::add_language ( CODE ,NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Language::delete_language ( CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Language::add_language_alias ( NAME ,NEW_NAME )
Locale::Language::delete_language_alias ( NAME )
Locale::Language::rename_language_code ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Language::add_language_code_alias ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Language::delete_language_code_alias ( CODE [,CODESET] )
These routines are all documented in the Locale::Codes man page.
SEE ALSO
Locale::Codes
Locale::Constants
http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/
Source of the ISO 639 codes.
AUTHOR
See Locale::Codes for full author history.
Currently maintained by Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-2001 Canon Research Centre Europe (CRE).
Copyright (c) 2001-2010 Neil Bowers
Copyright (c) 2010-2011 Sullivan Beck
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2011-09-26 Locale::Language(3perl)