this command works perfectly for me.
however i am not able to understand the complete working of command i tried and googled it also but failed to understand.
can you pleas eloborate it working specially below part.
i am trying to reformat a floppy i am using solaris 9 when i run this:
rmformat -F quick /vol/dev/aliases/floppy0
it tells me that it cannot perform the operation on a mounted device.
how do i unmount the device and format the floppy? (1 Reply)
Hi,
How can I reformat a file (text file) using unix command.
This file was FTP'd from Mainframe and contains some garbage character at the end of each line.
Each line contains special characters '<soh>' at the end which should have been spaces when I view it in emacs or nedit. I couldnt do find... (2 Replies)
I have a command that gives me the output below:
JAVA_HOME = C:/jdk1.5.0_11
Broker Performance Report for server 'app1'
RMI_URL = rmis://
Parameter Kintana ItgDS DashboardDS
---------------------------- ------- ----- -----------
Connections count 41 ... (4 Replies)
I currently have the following file containing sample values for a number of dates:
Loc1 04 Jan 2007 0.95 0.9532
Loc1 05 Jan 2007 0.95 0.9513
Loc1 06 Jan 2007 0.95 0.9535
This continues for all months of the year and spans across several years.
I am trying to reformat the dates so that... (2 Replies)
I have a file with temperature measurements:
Loc1,20090102,71.55
Loc1,20090103,71.65
Loc1,20090104,71.55
Loc1,20090105,71.54
Loc1,20090106,71.54
However, to load this into a database I would like to reformat the dates (column 2) from the yyyymmdd format to the yyyy-mm-dd format. I have... (2 Replies)
I have been reformatting dates from a data file to make them mysql compliant.
31-10-2011 Loc1
1-11-2011 Loc2
The first can be captured by this:
sed -i '' -e "s#\(..\)-\(..\)-\(....\)#\3-\2-\1#" data.txt
and leads to:
2011-10-31 Loc1
The second line is captured as follows:
sed -i... (2 Replies)
Hi!
I have a list with a lot of records that I need to work with. The problem is that the list is populated successive one record at the time in a text file, and to gain anything from these records I need them to be put out in a table.
This is an example of what the list looks like:
(145)... (5 Replies)
I have a file that I need to reformat so that every time I match a certain string in the first column it prints to the string as the heading and under the sting it prints the remaining entries on the line that matched the string.
For example, I need to reformat this
xxx : yyy zzz
11 : 111 222... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have an input file that looks like this (columns are tab delimited:
Data000005-RA GO:0003735 GO:0005840 GO:0006412
Data000005-RA GO:0003735
Data000009-RA GO:0003735 GO:0005622 GO:0005840 GO:0006412 ... (2 Replies)
Hello UNIX experts,
I'm stumped finding a method to reformat a column. Input file is a two column tab-delimited file. Essentially, for every term that appears in column 2, I would like to summarize whether that term appears for every entry in column 1. In other words, make a header for each term... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: torchij
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
locale::codes::langext
Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm)NAME
Locale::Codes::LangExt - standard codes for language extension identification
SYNOPSIS
use Locale::Codes::LangExt;
$lext = code2langext('acm'); # $lext gets 'Mesopotamian Arabic'
$code = langext2code('Mesopotamian Arabic'); # $code gets 'acm'
@codes = all_langext_codes();
@names = all_langext_names();
DESCRIPTION
The "Locale::Codes::LangExt" module provides access to standard codes used for identifying language extensions, such as those as defined in
the IANA language registry.
Most of the routines take an optional additional argument which specifies the code set to use. If not specified, the default IANA language
registry codes will be used.
SUPPORTED CODE SETS
There are several different code sets you can use for identifying language extensions. A code set may be specified using either a name, or
a constant that is automatically exported by this module.
For example, the two are equivalent:
$lext = code2langext('acm','alpha');
$lext = code2langext('acm',LOCALE_LANGEXT_ALPHA);
The codesets currently supported are:
alpha
This is the set of three-letter (lowercase) codes from the IANA language registry, such as 'acm' for Mesopotamian Arabic.
This is the default code set.
ROUTINES
code2langext ( CODE [,CODESET] )
langext2code ( NAME [,CODESET] )
langext_code2code ( CODE ,CODESET ,CODESET2 )
all_langext_codes ( [CODESET] )
all_langext_names ( [CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::rename_langext ( CODE ,NEW_NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext ( CODE ,NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext ( CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext_alias ( NAME ,NEW_NAME )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext_alias ( NAME )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::rename_langext_code ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext_code_alias ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext_code_alias ( CODE [,CODESET] )
These routines are all documented in the Locale::Codes::API man page.
SEE ALSO
Locale::Codes
The Locale-Codes distribution.
Locale::Codes::API
The list of functions supported by this module.
http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry
The IANA language subtag registry.
AUTHOR
See Locale::Codes for full author history.
Currently maintained by Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Sullivan Beck
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm)