I am trying to find a way to generate random numbers within a shell script.
Does Solaris have a utility that will generate random numbers?
Thanks in advance.
B (3 Replies)
Hi all, I have a tab separated file, and one of the fields is sub-delimited by colon. The problem is there can be zero to 4 colons within this field. When I try to change colons to tabs the result is a file with a differing number of fields.
I want to go from:
a:b:c:d:e
a:b:c
a:b:c:d:e
a... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am having two files (file1 & file2) and a filelist.txt file below.
file1:
$$STRINGVAR1=5
$$STRINGVAR2=10
$$LAST_UPD_DT_TBL1=12/12/2010 12:00:00
$$STRINGVAR3=100
$$LAST_UPD_DT_TBL2=01/01/2010 12:00:00... (8 Replies)
hi Gurus,
I need separate a file which is one huge line to multiple lines based on certain number of charactors. for example:
abcdefghi high abaddffdd
I want to separate the line to multiple lines for every 4 charactors.
the result should be
abcd
efgh
i hi
gh a
badd
ffdd
Thanks in... (5 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I have two files, namely:
file1:
file1Col1Row1;file1Col2Row1;file1Col3Row1
file1Col1Row2;file1Col2Row2;file1Col3Row2
file1Col1Row3;file1Col2Row3;file1Col3Row3file2:
file2Col1Row1;file2Col2Row1;file2Col3Row1
file2Col1Row2;file2Col2Row2;file2Col3Row2... (0 Replies)
Hey everyone,
I have a bunch of lines with values in field 4 that I am interested in.
If these values are between 1 and 3 I want it to count all these values to all be counted together and then have the computer print out
LOW and the number of lines with those values in between 1 and 3,... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Do anybody knows how to use awk or any command to random print out 1000 number which start from range 1 to 150000?
I know that "rand" in awk can do similar random selection.
But I have no idea how to write a code that can random pick 1000 number from range 1 to 150000 :confused:
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: perl_beginner
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
paps
PAPS(1) General Commands Manual PAPS(1)NAME
paps - UTF-8 to PostScript converter using Pango
SYNOPSIS
paps [options] files...
DESCRIPTION
paps reads a UTF-8 encoded file and generates a PostScript language rendering of the file. The rendering is done by creating outline curves
through the pango ft2 backend.
OPTIONS
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is
included below.
--landscape
Landscape output. Default is portrait.
--columns=cl
Number of columns output. Default is 1.
Please notice this option isn't related to the terminal length as in a "80 culums terminal".
--font=desc
Set the font description. Default is Monospace 12.
--rtl Do right to left (RTL) layout.
--paper ps
Choose paper size. Known paper sizes are legal, letter and A4. Default is A4.
Postscript points
Each postscript point equals to 1/72 of an inch. 36 points are 1/2 of an inch.
--bottom-margin=bm
Set bottom margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--top-margin=tm
Set top margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--left-margin=lm
Set left margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--right-margin=rm
Set right margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--gutter-width=gw
Set gutter width. Default is 40 postscript points.
--help Show summary of options.
--header
Draw page header for each page.
--markup
Interpret the text as pango markup.
--lpi Set the lines per inch. This determines the line spacing.
--cpi Set the characters per inch. This is an alternative method of specifying the font size.
--stretch-chars
Indicates that characters should be stretched in the y-direction to fill up their vertical space. This is similar to the texttops
behaviour.
AUTHOR
paps was written by Dov Grobgeld <dov.grobgeld@gmail.com>.
This manual page was written by Lior Kaplan <kaplan@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
April 17, 2006 PAPS(1)