Hi, I came across with this line "set -x" in the beginning of a script, but i can't find one logic reason for this... should be something else after, i think.... anyone can help?
tanx (2 Replies)
Hello,
So I sorted my file as I was supposed to:
sort -n -r -k 2 -k 1 file1 | uniq > file2
and when I wrote
> cat file2
in the command line, I got what I was expecting, but in the script itself
...
sort -n -r -k 2 -k 1 averages | uniq > temp
cat file2
It wrote a whole... (21 Replies)
cat ~/text.xt | while read line
do
echo ${line} | perl -pe 's/(\d+)/localtime($1)/e'
done
how can i efficiently re-code the above?
also, no matter how i run this, i'm not getting the current/correct date. the contents of the "text.xt" looks like this:
SERVICES... (2 Replies)
I wrote by accident:
cd .
and even hit ENTER.
Then I realized this is probably the most useless command that you can imagine. Yes, perhaps it could assert that there is still a working filesystem, but I am not sure about it.
What do you think?
Can you think of any more useless commands? :) (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: colemar
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
galician-minimos
WORDS(5) Linux Programmers Manual WORDS(5)NAME
galician-minimos - a list of Galician words, using the "minimos" standard
DESCRIPTION
/usr/share/dict/galician-minimos is an ASCII file which contains an alphabetic list of words, one per line.
FILES
/etc/dictionaries-common/words is a symbolic link to a /usr/share/dict/<language> file. /usr/share/dict/words is a symbolic link to
/etc/dictionaries-common/words, and is the name by which other software should refer to the system word list. See select-default-
wordlist(8) for more information.
The directory /usr/share/dict can contain word lists for many languages, with name of the language in English, e.g., /usr/share/dict/french
and /usr/share/dict/danish contain respectively lists of French and Danish words if they exist. Such lists should be coded using the ISO
8859-1 character set encoding.
SEE ALSO ispell(1), select-default-wordlist(8), and the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.
HISTORY
The words lists are not specific, and may be generated from any number of sources.
The system word list used to be /usr/dict/words. For compatibility, software should check that location if /usr/share/dict/words does not
exist.
AUTHOR
Word lists are collected and maintained by various authors.
Linux 14 Oct 2002 WORDS(5)