Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Replacing string by incrementing number Post 302836875 by OTNA on Wednesday 24th of July 2013 08:36:13 PM
Old 07-24-2013
awesome ,
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl + array and incrementing number

morning guys and gals, I am haveing a problem, a friend helped me out with this script but i dont know how to add incrementing number for each movie in movie.list. this is what i have so far. any assistance would be great. I have removed the GT and LT symbols so you can see what is going on... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Optimus_P
5 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replacing word and Incrementing

Hi I'm having difficulty in writing a script with searching a specified word using sed and replaces that word with numbers that is incremented I tried this: #!/bin/sh awk '{ for (i=2010; i<=NF; i++) sed 's/TBA/$i; }' filename.txt > outputfile.txt but it doesn't work. here is my desired... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sexyTrojan
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

replacing a string in multiple subdirs to a new string??

I have following set of dirs: /dir1/dir2/subdir1 file1 file2 /dir1/dir3/subdir1 file4 file5 /dir1/dir4/subdir1 file6 file7 All of these files have a common string in them say "STRING1", How can I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hangman2
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix c-shell - replacing/incrementing values in columns?

2 21 1 12 3 123 4 1234 6 49 0 49 33 212 I need to replace/increment all the values in the 2nd column that correspond to 0 in the first column. so for 0 49 i would get 0 50 this can be done through: paste num4.txt... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: audrey_flox
14 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

replacing a string with another string in a txt file

Dear all, I have a file like below. I want to replace all the '.' in the 3rd column with 'NA'. I don't know how to do that. Anyone has an iead? Thanks a lot! 8 70003200 21.6206 9 70005700 17.5064 10 70002200 . 11 70005100 19.1001 17 70008000 16.1970 32 70012400 26.3465 33... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: forevertl
9 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Incrementing number in bash

I have the following code and getting the error ./raytrac.bash: line 231: ((: 0++: syntax error: operand expected (error token is "+") iarg = 0 iarg=0 narg=$# # Number of arguments passed. echo "narg = $narg" argsArr=("$@") # Set... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kristinu
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Incrementing the New File Version Number

Hello All, In the below script i am trying to check and list the file names, get the last file with highest version number and then increment the version number when i create another file. Example: file1 is COBANK_v1.xml and file2 i want to put it as COBANK_v2.xml, to achieve this i am using awk... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ariean
15 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Incrementing parts of ten digits number by parts

I have number in file which contains date and serial number: 2013101000. The last two digits are serial number (00). So maximum of serial number is 100. After reaching 100 it becomes 00 with incrementing 10 which is day with max 31. after reaching 31 it becomes 00 and increments 10... (31 Replies)
Discussion started by: Natalie
31 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Incrementing the New File Version Number

Hi, This is my first post here. I am using cygwin on Windows 7. I am starting with a data file with filename "name_1.ext", like "20180831_snapgenotypes_1.csv". The "_1" before ".ext" is a version number. Integers (0-99) are sufficient. They don't have to be like "1.0.0". The filename may... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: minimalist
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

UNIX replacing and incrementing number

Hi I am unix newbie looking for a unix bash script that can make it easier to do my code work. we have a code number for each code block that we want to incrementally assign. We have 10000 of these and it is very laborious to do this one by one. so what we want is start from the top of the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chamajid
4 Replies
Config::INI::Reader(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				  Config::INI::Reader(3pm)

NAME
Config::INI::Reader - a subclassable .ini-file parser VERSION
version 0.019 SYNOPSIS
If family.ini contains: admin = rjbs [rjbs] awesome = yes height = 5' 10" [mj] awesome = totally height = 23" Then when your program contains: my $hash = Config::INI::Reader->read_file('family.ini'); $hash will contain: { '_' => { admin => 'rjbs' }, rjbs => { awesome => 'yes', height => q{5' 10"}, }, mj => { awesome => 'totally', height => '23"', }, } DESCRIPTION
Config::INI::Reader is yet another config module implementing yet another slightly different take on the undeniably easy to read ".ini" file format. Its default behavior is quite similar to that of Config::Tiny, on which it is based. The chief difference is that Config::INI::Reader is designed to be subclassed to allow for side-effects and self-reconfiguration to occur during the course of reading its input. METHODS FOR READING CONFIG
These methods are all that most users will need: they read configuration from a source of input, then they return the data extracted from that input. There are three reader methods, "read_string", "read_file", and "read_handle". The first two are implemented in terms of the third. It iterates over lines in a file, calling methods on the reader when events occur. Those events are detailed below in the "METHODS FOR SUBCLASSING" section. All of the reader methods return an unblessed reference to a hash. All throw an exception when they encounter an error. read_file my $hash_ref = Config::INI::Reader->read_file($filename); Given a filename, this method returns a hashref of the contents of that file. read_string my $hash_ref = Config::INI::Reader->read_string($string); Given a string, this method returns a hashref of the contents of that string. read_handle my $hash_ref = Config::INI::Reader->read_handle($io_handle); Given an IO::Handle, this method returns a hashref of the contents of that handle. METHODS FOR SUBCLASSING
These are the methods you need to understand and possibly change when subclassing Config::INI::Reader to handle a different format of input. current_section my $section_name = $reader->current_section; This method returns the name of the current section. If no section has yet been set, it returns the result of calling the "starting_section" method. parse_section_header my $name = $reader->parse_section_header($line); Given a line of input, this method decides whether the line is a section-change declaration. If it is, it returns the name of the section to which to change. If the line is not a section-change, the method returns false. change_section $reader->change_section($section_name); This method is called whenever a section change occurs in the file. The default implementation is to change the current section into which data is being read and to initialize that section to an empty hashref. parse_value_assignment my ($name, $value) = $reader->parse_value_assignment($line); Given a line of input, this method decides whether the line is a property value assignment. If it is, it returns the name of the property and the value being assigned to it. If the line is not a property assignment, the method returns false. set_value $reader->set_value($name, $value); This method is called whenever an assignment occurs in the file. The default behavior is to change the value of the named property to the given value. starting_section my $section = Config::INI::Reader->starting_section; This method returns the name of the starting section. The default is: "_" can_ignore do_nothing if $reader->can_ignore($line) This method returns true if the given line of input is safe to ignore. The default implementation ignores lines that contain only whitespace or comments. preprocess_line $reader->preprocess_line($line); This method is called to preprocess each line after it's read but before it's parsed. The default implementation just strips inline comments. Alterations to the line are made in place. handle_unparsed_line $reader->handle_unparsed_line( $io, $line ); This method is called when the reader encounters a line that doesn't look like anything it recognizes. By default, it throws an exception. finalize $reader->finalize; This method is called when the reader has finished reading in every line of the file. new my $reader = Config::INI::Reader->new; This method returns a new reader. This generally does not need to be called by anything but the various "read_*" methods, which create a reader object only ephemerally. ORIGIN
Originaly derived from Config::Tiny, by Adam Kennedy. AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2007 by Ricardo Signes. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2011-12-15 Config::INI::Reader(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:58 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy