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Full Discussion: Crontab compressed version
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Crontab compressed version Post 302960690 by RudiC on Wednesday 18th of November 2015 01:46:06 PM
Old 11-18-2015
You're almost there. Why don't you schedule it five minutes from now, give it a small subset to work on, and check the results. Then do some fine tuning...

Last edited by RudiC; 11-19-2015 at 05:29 PM.. Reason: "Then" wasn't right.
 

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Crontab(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						Crontab(3)

NAME
Set::Crontab - Expand crontab(5)-style integer lists SYNOPSIS
$s = Set::Crontab->new("1-9/3,>15,>30,!23", [0..30]); if ($s->contains(3)) { ... } DESCRIPTION
Set::Crontab parses crontab-style lists of integers and defines some utility functions to make it easier to deal with them. Syntax Numbers, ranges, *, and step values all work exactly as described in crontab(5). A few extensions to the standard syntax are described below. < and > <N selects the elements smaller than N from the entire range, and adds them to the set. >N does likewise for elements larger than N. ! !N excludes N from the set. It applies to the other specified range; otherwise it applies to the specified ranges (i.e. "!3" with a range of "1-10" corresponds to "1-2,4-10", but ">3,!7" in the same range means "4-6,8-10"). Functions new($spec, [@range]) Creates a new Set::Crontab object and returns a reference to it. contains($num) Returns true if $num exists in the set. list() Returns the expanded list corresponding to the set. The functions described above croak if they are called with incorrect arguments. SEE ALSO
crontab(5) AUTHOR
Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@toroid.org> Copyright 2001 Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@toroid.org> This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.1 2008-07-30 Crontab(3)
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