In addition to what greet_sed has already said:
is an inefficient way of implementing:
If you don't show us the format of your input files (and provide a sample of one of your input files) and show us the results you are trying to obtain, we can't do much to help you.
What you have given us so far is basically: I want to create a file that is related to some other files. It isn't working. Fix it for me.
I'm afraid that we aren't omniscient enough to discern what output you want. Please help us help you!
Last edited by Don Cragun; 10-27-2013 at 06:39 PM..
Reason: Remove mistaken comment about final statement in script.
i would like advice on the usbject of c programming (in the middle of reading a book on C). could i benefit more if i apply that knowledge in the unix format if i were able to, or would that take the point out of learning C, basically I want to stay away from strying too far away from unix and use... (1 Reply)
Several months ago I found a link that explained the difference between how a Unix Systems Admin would do scripting compared to what a Unix Programmer would do.
It showed a basic script and then show several iterations that explained how the Systems Admin would change it to make it better. I was... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I have a simple script such as
-----------------------------
#! /bin/sh
YEAR=`date -u +%Y`;
MONTH=`date -u +%m`;
DAY=`date -u +%d`;
DATE=$MONTH$DAY$YEAR
LOGFILES=auditTrail-$DATE
LOGMATCH=$LOGFILES\*
ARGUM=''
# find all files and write them to a file
find . -name... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I am trying to learn Networking Programming in C in unix enviorment. I want to know how good it is to become a network programmer. i am crazy about Network programming but i also want to opt for the best carreer options. Anybody experienced Network Programmer, please tell me is my... (5 Replies)
Can someone help me on suggesting some ways to access the memory content in RAM directly from C/C++ source code.
Please provide me any book name or any URL so that I can get an exhaustive
knowledge over it.
If possible please give me some tips on interacting with hardwares directly
through... (3 Replies)
Hi ! all I am just trying to check range in my datafile
pls tell me why its resulting wrong
admin@IEEE:~/Desktop$ cat test.txt
0 28.4
5 28.4
10 28.4
15 28.5
20 28.5
25 28.6
30 28.6
35 28.7
40 28.7
45 28.7
50 28.8
55 28.8
60 28.8
65 28.1... (2 Replies)
Here is my code....
just want to compare column 1 and 2 of file 2 with file 1 as standard file and print file 2 all contents with matched index value stored in $8 of file 1
awk 'NR==FNR{
A=$0;B++;next}
{print A?$0 FS B: $0 FS "Not-Found" }' FS="\t" file1 file2 here B is not printing if... (19 Replies)
Hello.
I like Linux and C programming language. Allways wanted to understand kernel and become a Linux system programmer. And I also like Objective-C and iOS. These two programming areas have relations:
1. Linux and iOS are UNIX-like systems, POSIX compliant.
2. It is useful to know C language... (2 Replies)
oap_ret_fnc() {
echo " Enter patch number you want to retract or 99 to exit\c"
read ret_patch
if
then
exit 0
else
if
then
mv $ret_patch directory
else
clear
echo "patch does not exist in directory."
oap_ret_fnc
fi
fi
exit 0
}
oap_ret_fnc (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmarzan
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
address
Address(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Address(3pm)NAME
Palm::Address - Handler for Palm AddressBook databases
SYNOPSIS
use Palm::Address;
DESCRIPTION
The Address PDB handler is a helper class for the Palm::PDB package. It parses AddressBook databases.
AppInfo block
The AppInfo block begins with standard category support. See Palm::StdAppInfo for details.
Other fields include:
$pdb->{appinfo}{lastUniqueID}
$pdb->{appinfo}{dirtyFields}
I don't know what these are.
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{name}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{firstName}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{company}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone1}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone2}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone3}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone4}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone5}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone6}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone7}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{phone8}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{address}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{city}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{state}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{zipCode}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{country}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{title}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{custom1}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{custom2}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{custom3}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{custom4}
$pdb->{appinfo}{fieldLabels}{note}
These are the names of the various fields in the address record.
$pdb->{appinfo}{country}
An integer: the code for the country for which these labels were designed. The country name is available as
$Palm::Address::countries[$pdb->{appinfo}{country}];
$pdb->{appinfo}{misc}
An integer. The least-significant bit is a flag that indicates whether the database should be sorted by company. The other bits are
reserved.
Sort block
$pdb->{sort}
This is a scalar, the raw data of the sort block.
Records
$record = $pdb->{records}[N];
$record->{fields}{name}
$record->{fields}{firstName}
$record->{fields}{company}
$record->{fields}{phone1}
$record->{fields}{phone2}
$record->{fields}{phone3}
$record->{fields}{phone4}
$record->{fields}{phone5}
$record->{fields}{address}
$record->{fields}{city}
$record->{fields}{state}
$record->{fields}{zipCode}
$record->{fields}{country}
$record->{fields}{title}
$record->{fields}{custom1}
$record->{fields}{custom2}
$record->{fields}{custom3}
$record->{fields}{custom4}
$record->{fields}{note}
These are scalars, the values of the various address book fields.
$record->{phoneLabel}{phone1}
$record->{phoneLabel}{phone2}
$record->{phoneLabel}{phone3}
$record->{phoneLabel}{phone4}
$record->{phoneLabel}{phone5}
Most fields in an AddressBook record are straightforward: the "name" field always gives the person's last name.
The "phoneN" fields, on the other hand, can mean different things in different records. There are five such fields in each record, each of
which can take on one of eight different values: "Work", "Home", "Fax", "Other", "E-mail", "Main", "Pager" and "Mobile".
The $record->{phoneLabel}{phone*} fields are integers. Each one is an index into @Palm::Address::phoneLabels, and indicates which
particular type of phone number each of the $record->{phone*} fields represents.
$record->{phoneLabel}{display}
Like the phone* fields above, this is an index into @Palm::Address::phoneLabels. It indicates which of the phone* fields to display in the
list view.
$record->{phoneLabel}{reserved}
I don't know what this is.
METHODS
new
$pdb = new Palm::Address;
Create a new PDB, initialized with the various Palm::Address fields and an empty record list.
Use this method if you're creating an Address PDB from scratch.
new_Record
$record = $pdb->new_Record;
Creates a new Address record, with blank values for all of the fields. The AppInfo block will contain only an "Unfiled" category, with ID
0.
"new_Record" does not add the new record to $pdb. For that, you want "$pdb->append_Record".
SOURCE CONTROL
The source is in Github:
http://github.com/briandfoy/p5-Palm/tree/master
AUTHOR
Alessandro Zummo, "<a.zummo@towertech.it>"
Currently maintained by brian d foy, "<bdfoy@cpan.org>"
SEE ALSO Palm::PDB(3)Palm::StdAppInfo(3)BUGS
The new() method initializes the AppInfo block with English labels and "United States" as the country.
perl v5.10.1 2010-02-23 Address(3pm)