Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Matching string
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Matching string Post 302798413 by abdul.irfan2 on Wednesday 24th of April 2013 11:31:56 AM
Old 04-24-2013
wow...couple of simple spaces drove me nuts for an hour...Thank you for your help..May GOD bless you...
This User Gave Thanks to abdul.irfan2 For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

matching alphanumeric string

how to match an alphanumeric string like the following. i have to do like the following. if the input line is the data is {clock_91b} i have to replace that with the string was ("clock_91b") i tried like $line =~ s/the data is\s+\{(+)\}/the string was \(\"$1\"\)/ which... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sskb
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed problem - replacement string should be same length as matching string.

Hi guys, I hope you can help me with my problem. I have a text file that contains lines like this: 78 ANGELO -809.05 79 ANGELO2 -5,000.06 I need to find all occurences of amounts that are negative and replace them with x's 78 ANGELO xxxxxxx 79... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: amangeles
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

String matching

for a certain directory, I want to grep a particular file called ABCD so what I do is ls /my/dir | grep -i "ABCD" | awk '{print $9}' however, there is also this file called ABCDEFG, the above command would reurn both file when I only want ABCD, please help! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mpang_
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

string matching in perl

Hi, I have to search for a string in a variable. Say the variable is var1='ERROR: Make java] as enabled' here i want to match which are in red color. other like abc etc could change. Can you tell me the exact command something like the below in perl if ($var1=~ m/ERROR: Make... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ammu
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Matching string

Hello, i have a program where i have to get a character from the user and check it against the word i have and then replace the character in a blank at the same position it is in the word. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: nehaquick
7 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

matching a string

I have a requirement of shell script where i need to read the File name i.e ls -t | head -1 and Match that Filename with some delimited values which are in a separate File. For Example i am reading the File name i.e (ls -t | head -1) after that i need to read one more sequential file which... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dsdev_123
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Matching 2 items in a string

Little lost here, I am trying to search a line for both values after the $ signs. My ultimate goal is to get percertage. <?php $string = "Something on sale for $4 and orginal price $10"; $strstr =. strstr($string, '$'); $strrchr =. strrchr($string, '$'); echo "$strstr<br>"; echo... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mrlayance
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

String matching

I have a string like ab or abc of whatever length. But i want to know whether another string ( for example, abcfghijkl, OR a<space> bcfghijkl ab<space> cfghijkl OR a<space>bcfghijkl OR ab<space> c<space> fghijkl ) starts with ab or abc... space might existing on the longer string... If so, i... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nram_krishna@ya
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Matching string from input to string of file

Hi, i want to know how to compare string of file with input string im trying following code: file_no=`paste -s -d "||||\n" a.txt | cut -c 1` #it will return collection number from file echo "enter number" read " curr_no" if ; then echo " current number already present" fi ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: a_smith
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

String matching using awk

Hello, I am working with google ngram data set which is of size 100s of gb. Before using it with Java, I wanted to filter it out using shell script. Here is a sample line in the file: 2.55 1.57 1992 10 20 30 The first two fields (2.55 and 1.57) are... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shekhar2010us
3 Replies
Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)				 Perl Programmers Reference Guide			      Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)

NAME
Pod::Simple::PullParser -- a pull-parser interface to parsing Pod SYNOPSIS
my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( "whatever.pod" ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( $some_filehandle_object ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( $document_source ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( @document_lines ); $parser->run; And elsewhere: require 5; package SomePodProcessor; use strict; use base qw(Pod::Simple::PullParser); sub run { my $self = shift; Token: while(my $token = $self->get_token) { ...process each token... } } DESCRIPTION
This class is for using Pod::Simple to build a Pod processor -- but one that uses an interface based on a stream of token objects, instead of based on events. This is a subclass of Pod::Simple and inherits all its methods. A subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParser should define a "run" method that calls "$token = $parser->get_token" to pull tokens. See the source for Pod::Simple::RTF for an example of a formatter that uses Pod::Simple::PullParser. METHODS
my $token = $parser->get_token This returns the next token object (which will be of a subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParserToken), or undef if the parser-stream has hit the end of the document. $parser->unget_token( $token ) $parser->unget_token( $token1, $token2, ... ) This restores the token object(s) to the front of the parser stream. The source has to be set before you can parse anything. The lowest-level way is to call "set_source": $parser->set_source( $filename ) $parser->set_source( $filehandle_object ) $parser->set_source( $document_source ) $parser->set_source( @document_lines ) Or you can call these methods, which Pod::Simple::PullParser has defined to work just like Pod::Simple's same-named methods: $parser->parse_file(...) $parser->parse_string_document(...) $parser->filter(...) $parser->parse_from_file(...) For those to work, the Pod-processing subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParser has to have defined a $parser->run method -- so it is advised that all Pod::Simple::PullParser subclasses do so. See the Synopsis above, or the source for Pod::Simple::RTF. Authors of formatter subclasses might find these methods useful to call on a parser object that you haven't started pulling tokens from yet: my $title_string = $parser->get_title This tries to get the title string out of $parser, by getting some tokens, and scanning them for the title, and then ungetting them so that you can process the token-stream from the beginning. For example, suppose you have a document that starts out: =head1 NAME Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff B<wow> yeah! $parser->get_title on that document will return "Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff wow yeah!". If the document starts with: =head1 Name Hoo::Boy::W00t -- Stuff B<w00t> yeah! Then you'll need to pass the "nocase" option in order to recognize "Name": $parser->get_title(nocase => 1); In cases where get_title can't find the title, it will return empty-string (""). my $title_string = $parser->get_short_title This is just like get_title, except that it returns just the modulename, if the title seems to be of the form "SomeModuleName -- description". For example, suppose you have a document that starts out: =head1 NAME Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff B<wow> yeah! then $parser->get_short_title on that document will return "Hoo::Boy::Wowza". But if the document starts out: =head1 NAME Hooboy, stuff B<wow> yeah! then $parser->get_short_title on that document will return "Hooboy, stuff wow yeah!". If the document starts with: =head1 Name Hoo::Boy::W00t -- Stuff B<w00t> yeah! Then you'll need to pass the "nocase" option in order to recognize "Name": $parser->get_short_title(nocase => 1); If the title can't be found, then get_short_title returns empty-string (""). $author_name = $parser->get_author This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 AUTHOR Paragraph... " section, assuming that that section isn't terribly long. To recognize a "=head1 Author Paragraph " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_author(nocase => 1); (This method tolerates "AUTHORS" instead of "AUTHOR" too.) $description_name = $parser->get_description This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 DESCRIPTION Paragraph... " section, assuming that that section isn't terribly long. To recognize a "=head1 Description Paragraph " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_description(nocase => 1); $version_block = $parser->get_version This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 VERSION [BIG BLOCK] " block. Note that this does NOT return the module's $VERSION!! To recognize a "=head1 Version [BIG BLOCK] " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_version(nocase => 1); NOTE
You don't actually have to define a "run" method. If you're writing a Pod-formatter class, you should define a "run" just so that users can call "parse_file" etc, but you don't have to. And if you're not writing a formatter class, but are instead just writing a program that does something simple with a Pod::PullParser object (and not an object of a subclass), then there's no reason to bother subclassing to add a "run" method. SEE ALSO
Pod::Simple Pod::Simple::PullParserToken -- and its subclasses Pod::Simple::PullParserStartToken, Pod::Simple::PullParserTextToken, and Pod::Simple::PullParserEndToken. HTML::TokeParser, which inspired this. SUPPORT
Questions or discussion about POD and Pod::Simple should be sent to the pod-people@perl.org mail list. Send an empty email to pod-people-subscribe@perl.org to subscribe. This module is managed in an open GitHub repository, http://github.com/theory/pod-simple/ <http://github.com/theory/pod-simple/>. Feel free to fork and contribute, or to clone git://github.com/theory/pod-simple.git <git://github.com/theory/pod-simple.git> and send patches! Patches against Pod::Simple are welcome. Please send bug reports to <bug-pod-simple@rt.cpan.org>. COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMERS
Copyright (c) 2002 Sean M. Burke. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. AUTHOR
Pod::Simple was created by Sean M. Burke <sburke@cpan.org>. But don't bother him, he's retired. Pod::Simple is maintained by: o Allison Randal "allison@perl.org" o Hans Dieter Pearcey "hdp@cpan.org" o David E. Wheeler "dwheeler@cpan.org" perl v5.16.2 2012-10-25 Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:46 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy