Using bash, I'm trying to read a .properties file (name=value pairs), assigning an indirect variable reference for each line in the file.
The trick is that a property's value string may contain the name of a property that occurred earlier in the file, and I want the name of the 1st property to... (5 Replies)
The construct ${#parameter} returns the number of characters in the parameter and ${!parameter} specifies an indirect variable. My question is: How do I combine these two. What I want is ${#!parameter} but this gives an error.
Of course I can use:
dummy=${!parameter}
${#dummy}
but that's a... (0 Replies)
Ummm can anybody help me with this one?
Its prob quite simple.
I bascially have a file name say J1x2x3x7.dat
Im using the file name as a variable in a bash script. Want I want to do is extract most of the file name and make it a new variable expect with say one of the number now a... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I've got a small problem.
If varible A stores "B" and Variable B stores C,
How to get the value of variable B by using only Variable A..?
I tried the following but didnt work pease help..
$ var1=vikram
$ echo $var1
vikram
$ vikram=sampath
$ echo $vikram
sampath
$ echo... (6 Replies)
Hi
I have variable A_B=alpha
also var1="A"
var2="B"
I want to retrieve the value alpha using var1 and var2 , somthing like
echo ${${var1}_${var2}} that works. Obviously this is receiving syntax
error (6 Replies)
Hello,
is there a kind soul who can answer me, does the SH support double substitution known as indirect expansion similar to BASH? The syntax for bash is ${!var}.
For instance in bash I can write something like this:
VAR="value"
REF_VAR="VAR"
echo ${!REF_VAR}
and get the "value"... (1 Reply)
I have a file with two columns of numbers (member IDs):
1 1
2 1
3 1
4 2
5 4
6 1
7 5
8 3
9 2
Think of column 1 as the referee and column 2 as the referrer.
Is there a good way to backtrack who referred who? I would like an output, for this example here to be:
1 1
2 1
3 1
4 2 1 (2 Replies)
Sometimes it is handy to protect long scripts in C++.
The following syntax works fine for simple commands:
#define SHELLSCRIPT1 "\
#/bin/bash \n\
echo \"hello\" \n\
"
int main ()
{
cout <<system(SHELLSCRIPT1);
return 0;
}
Unfortunately for there are problems for:
1d arrays:... (10 Replies)
Trying to do so
echo "111:222:333" |awk -F: '{system("export TESTO=" $2)}'But it doesn't work (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: urello
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
set
set(n) Tcl Built-In Commands set(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
set - Read and write variables
SYNOPSIS
set varName ?value?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Returns the value of variable varName. If value is specified, then set the value of varName to value, creating a new variable if one
doesn't already exist, and return its value. If varName contains an open parenthesis and ends with a close parenthesis, then it refers to
an array element: the characters before the first open parenthesis are the name of the array, and the characters between the parentheses
are the index within the array. Otherwise varName refers to a scalar variable. Normally, varName is unqualified (does not include the
names of any containing namespaces), and the variable of that name in the current namespace is read or written. If varName includes names-
pace qualifiers (in the array name if it refers to an array element), the variable in the specified namespace is read or written.
If no procedure is active, then varName refers to a namespace variable (global variable if the current namespace is the global namespace).
If a procedure is active, then varName refers to a parameter or local variable of the procedure unless the global command was invoked to
declare varName to be global, or unless a variable command was invoked to declare varName to be a namespace variable.
SEE ALSO
expr(n), proc(n), trace(n), unset(n)
KEYWORDS
read, write, variable
Tcl set(n)