How to insert leading zeros into a left-justisfied zip code?
e.g. Zip code is written as 60320 which is left-justified to make it be read as 0060320.
We have to move it to right-justifiable then insert 2 leading zeros into it... ;) (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am working with a fixed width file Forrmat.
C1 Number (10,3)
C2 Number (10,3)
e.g.
c1= 0000000100.000
c2= 0000000020.000
0000000100.0000000000020.000
I have to perform c1 - c2 . i.e. I want answer to be 0000000080.000. but I am loosing the leading zeros( only getting... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a file in which I have 5 columns which are delimited by “|” as shown
ABC|12|YAK|METRIC|000000019.5
XYZ|10|ABX|META|000000002.5
Now my requirement is to take the last column trim the leading zero's for that column values and write back to the same file in the same... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I have file with numeric values. I need to pad each value with leading zeros such that total lenght of each value is 16.
Example:
cat tmp.txt
502455
50255
5026
5027
5028
Output
0000000000502455
0000000000050255
0000000000005026
0000000000005027
0000000000005028
Any... (12 Replies)
Hi
i need help in adding leading zero to filenames
e.g file name in my folder are
1_234sd.txt
23_234sd.txt
the output i need is
001_234sd.txt
023_234sd.txt
can i do this shell scripting
please help (2 Replies)
Hello Gurus,
Quick question. I have a file with the following records:
A~000000000000518000~SLP ~99991231~20090701~88.50~USD~CS~
A~000000000000518000~SLP ~99991231~20090701~102.00~USD~CS~
A~000000000000772000~SLP ~99991231~20100701~118.08~USD~CS~
I wold like to do the following:
1. Add... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i have a variable which conatins values like 00001,0003,00067,00459.
I want to use the values one by one and in the same form as they are like 00001,0003,00067,00459.
Also can anyone tell me how to increment those numbers by 1,keeping the format as same like 00002,0004,00068,00460.... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I have a pipe separated file with two major lines. One is header and another is detail line. Header starts with H and Detail start with D.
Sample Content:
H|123456|Joes Watson|UK|4/5/2016|12/5/2016|3456|HC|NW||||||
D|123456|Joes... (13 Replies)
Hi All,
I am using a informatica job to create a csv file and a unix script the mail the generated file.Everything is working fine but I am not seeing leading zeros in the csv file sent in the mail.These zeros were present when the .csv file was generated by informatica procees.
Is there any... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthik adiga
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rt::client::rest::searchresult
RT::Client::REST::SearchResult(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation RT::Client::REST::SearchResult(3pm)NAME
RT::Client::REST::SearchResult -- Search results representation.
SYNOPSIS
my $iterator = $search->get_iterator;
my $count = $iterator->count;
while (defined(my $obj = &$iterator)) {
# do something with the $obj
}
DESCRIPTION
This class is a representation of a search result. This is the type of the object you get back when you call method "search()" on
RT::Client::REST::Object-derived objects. It makes it easy to iterate over results and find out just how many there are.
METHODS
count
Returns the number of search results. This number will always be the same unless you stick your fat dirty fingers into the object and
abuse it. This number is not affected by calls to "get_iterator()".
get_iterator
Returns a reference to a subroutine which is used to iterate over the results.
Evaluating it in scalar context, returns the next object or "undef" if all the results have already been iterated over. Note that for
each object to be instantiated with correct values, retrieve() method is called on the object before returning it to the caller.
Evaluating the subroutine reference in list context returns a list of all results fully instantiated. WARNING: this may be expensive,
as each object is issued retrieve() method. Subsequent calls to the iterator result in empty list.
You may safely mix calling the iterator in scalar and list context. For example:
$iterator = $search->get_iterator;
$first = &$iterator;
$second = &$iterator;
@the_rest = &$iterator;
You can get as many iterators as you want -- they will not step on each other's toes.
new You should not have to call it yourself, but just for the sake of completeness, here are the arguments:
my $search = RT::Client::REST::SearchResult->new(
ids => [1 .. 10],
object => sub { # Yup, that's a closure.
RT::Client::REST::Ticket->new(
id => shift,
rt => $rt,
);
},
);
SEE ALSO
RT::Client::REST::Object, RT::Client::REST.
AUTHOR
Dmitri Tikhonov <dtikhonov@yahoo.com>
perl v5.14.2 2011-12-27 RT::Client::REST::SearchResult(3pm)