I think I might have bitten off more than I can chew here and I'm hoping some of you guys with advanced pattern matching skills can help me.
What I want to do is index the occurrence of variable names within a library of scripts that I have. Don't ask why, I'm just sad like that...
I have code of this form:
Code:
EXPECTED_FILE=$(m_find_file ${CSV})
if ! m_check_file -f "${EXPECTED_FILE}" s
then
m_junit_xml_log_failure ${TT} "${FQN%/*}" "${SCRIPT_NAME}" "Muse Runtime" "Expected file not found" "${XML_REPORT}"
m_fail 1 "Error: Failed to find expected result file (${CSV}) (${SCRIPT_NAME})"
fi
As you can see the variable names are all uppercase and can contain the characters [_A-Z0-9].
First of all I want to isolate all of the lines containing a variable and record the line number.
Then within each line I want to pull out each variable name in isolation, without any surrounding braces.
Then I can use this to build up an indexed list of each instance of each variable name and use that in some tools to inform the developer wherever an instance of a variable name is used or defined.
Hi
I have several variables called
var1, var2, var3, var4 and so on.
I would like to examine the contents of the variables using a loop
and a variable called num which equals a figure
eg
num=3
I wanted to do something like
echo $var$num
to display the contents of var3 (4 Replies)
I am trying to process error files in selected directories. I can count the files that are there and export the contents to a file for either emailing or printing. The next step is to move the files to a processed directory with the name changed to .fixed as the last extension.
for file in... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a variable v_iteration which can equal any 3 digit number eg 001 or 926
I would like to dynamically make a new variable name up using this 3 digit number
eg
v_another_variable_001=fred
v_another_variable_926=joe
The following are examples of what I have tried
... (2 Replies)
Is there a way to do make-style computed variable names in awk? e.g. in make
foo = bar
bar = wocket
I can get "wocket" with $($(foo))
Alternatively can you list all defined variables in awk?
thanks (4 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
I was just curious if you are allowed to begin a variable name with a number. For example, I would really like to have the variable 8DAY_AVERAGE. But my shell script only seems to allow EIGHTDAY_AVERAGE. Is there a way I can get the former to work? I am using bash. Thanks a lot!
... (1 Reply)
I am trying to write a piece of code that will call a value from an array. There are multiple arrays that I need to call data from. Only one array needs to be used based on the step within the program. The arrays have the names "cue_0", "cue_1", and so on.
I can't figure out how to call a value... (2 Replies)
Hi All ,
I am having confusion in a shell script. Please guide me.
I need to get multiple files (number of files vary time to time, file names are separated by '|') using FTP get from the remote server.
Actually, i call the FTP function in a loop. At the last step, i need to move all the get... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am using BASH. I have encountered a situation where the following is necessary (but I am not sure how to do it):
#Define multiple arrays, whose names only differ by a number:
ARRAY_1=(1 2 3)
ARRAY_2=(4 5 6)
ARRAY_3=(7 8 9)
#Define ARRAY_AMOUNT, the number of arrays. In this case... (1 Reply)
Simple enough problem I think, I just can't seem to get it right.
The below doesn't work as intended, it's just a function defined in a much larger script:
CheckValues() {
for field in \
Group_ID \
Group_Title \
Rule_ID \
Rule_Severity \
... (2 Replies)
If I run two different TCSH scripts simultaneously that use identical variable names will this cause any problems? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thibodc
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
scope
scope(n) [incr Tcl] scope(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
scope - capture the namespace context for a variable
SYNOPSIS
itcl::scope name
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Creates a scoped value for the specified name, which must be a variable name. If the name is an instance variable, then the scope command
returns a string of the following form:
@itcl object varName
This is recognized in any context as an instance variable belonging to object. So with itcl3.0 and beyond, it is possible to use instance
variables in conjunction with widgets. For example, if you have an object with a private variable x, and you can use x in conjunction with
the -textvariable option of an entry widget. Before itcl3.0, only common variables could be used in this manner.
If the name is not an instance variable, then it must be a common variable or a global variable. In that case, the scope command returns
the fully qualified name of the variable, e.g., ::foo::bar::x.
If the name is not recognized as a variable, the scope command returns an error.
Ordinary variable names refer to variables in the global namespace. A scoped value captures a variable name together with its namespace
context in a way that allows it to be referenced properly later. It is needed, for example, to wrap up variable names when a Tk widget is
used within a namespace:
namespace foo {
private variable mode 1
radiobutton .rb1 -text "Mode #1" -variable [scope mode] -value 1
pack .rb1
radiobutton .rb2 -text "Mode #2" -variable [scope mode] -value 2
pack .rb2
}
Radiobuttons .rb1 and .rb2 interact via the variable "mode" contained in the namespace "foo". The scope command guarantees this by return-
ing the fully qualified variable name ::foo::mode.
You should never use the @itcl syntax directly. For example, it is a bad idea to write code like this:
set {@itcl ::fred x} 3
puts "value = ${@itcl ::fred x}"
Instead, you should always use the scope command to generate the variable name dynamically. Then, you can pass that name to a widget or to
any other bit of code in your program.
KEYWORDS
code, namespace, variable
itcl scope(n)