I dont know why this Linux would give me badly placed () error all the time for this;
can anyone help me please?
It is always MUCH easier to help you solve problems like this if you show us the error message(s) you get when you post a question like this.
As a very wild guess, I'd say that you're trying to execute C code with a shell.
Assuming that the above code is stored in a file with a name ending with ".c" (such as "example.c"), the following should compile your code (although it probably won't do what you expect it to):
and then you could run the compiled program with:
and the output produced would be something like:
If the output you wanted was something like:
you could get that by adding the braces shown in red above.
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hi,
when I execute the below script, I am getting following error "Badly placed ()'s". can anyone please help me fix
----------------------------------------------------------
# Usage: ani -n -a -s -w -d
#
#
# help_ani() To print help
#
help_ani()
{
echo "Usage: $0 -n -a -s -w -d"... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am doing the following but it complains and says "for:badly formed number"
does anyone know why?
#!/bin/tcsh
foreach(....)
............
set depth=64
set width=23
if ($depth==64) then
echo "if"
set addr_bits=5
else
echo "else"
endif
echo "addr_bits:$addr_bits"
echo... (3 Replies)
how can I delete one line above and below the matching pattern ?
e.g I want to delete the line above and below the line with %CLI- in example below :
$CHECKSUM $1$DGA1043:TSTST01.DBF;1
%CLI-E-OPENIN, error opening $1$DGA1043:TSTST01.DBF
-RMS-E-FLK, file currently locked by another user
... (6 Replies)
I have the following script running every day numerous times a day and it works fine, but very occasionally I get the following error
if: Badly formed number.
Anyone know why?
Here is the script that runs with the follow parms
LCTMDBSE 100000 130000 160000
#!/bin/csh
... (0 Replies)
I have this file:
NPANXX|BILLDATE|DIVCODE|COMID|RAO|LIKECODE|BOSS|SORD|STATECODE|
087001|BP01|H|SWBT| |041|IMR6|IMSR6|AR|
087002|BP03|H|SWBT| |042|IMR6|IMSR6|AR|
087003|BP05|H|SWBT| |043|IMR6|IMSR6|AR|
....
these are the things that i HAve to do:
Insert a new column named “TEST”
All... (14 Replies)
i'm trying to run the following program but i keep getting the message "badly placed ()'s" can u help?
#include "modularity_mat.h"
#include "../sparse_mlpl/sparse_matrix.h"
adj_matrix_arr* allocate_mem_for_matrix_arr (int y) {
/* Create the adj matrix and allocate memory */
... (2 Replies)
The shell error message "Badly placed ()'s" can occur for a surprisingly simple oversight. If the script begins with a shell-invocation comment, but is missing the exclamation-point, it is simply a comment and not an invocation. If you attempt to execute it from a shell other than the shell you... (4 Replies)
The terminal is bash.
Whenever I try to execute csh just by itself it gives Badly Placed ()'s.
Whenever I try to use csh with a script it also gives Badly Placed ()'s.
My script is this, there is nothing wrong with it, since it used by other students in class as well. (I have also asked... (5 Replies)
Edit - I don't know how to delete posts. The question I asked here ended up not being the question I should have asked as I didn't realise I needed to edit my script to comply with SGE.
Hi,
My script is:
#!/bin/bash
# Perform fastqc on files in a specified directory.
for ((j=1;... (8 Replies)
I used the below script to Sum up a field in a file based on some unique values. But the problem is when it is summing up the units, it is truncating to 2 decimals and not 6 decimals as in the input file (Input file has the units with up to 6 Decimals – Sample data below, when the units in the 2... (4 Replies)