Hi, can anyone explain me how this works (how the flow goes)?
Example:
CLIENT="UNIXHELP"
The second argument passed $2="UNIX"
RESULT=`awk -F"=" '/CLIENTS=/ {len = index($2,"'${CLIENT}'");print len }' $2`
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
hi, :)
In a shell script i came accross the following lines
1.for i in ` find /home/oracle -name ch'
2.do
3.echo $i
4.idx=`expr index $i .`
5.done
Here iam not able to understand the porpose of the word "index" in line 4.
any help ?
cheers
RRK (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I am using Legato networker for my backups, I need to restore some data from 2001.
When doing an inventory on the tape is picks up the label but under pool it says "not in media index".
When doing: nsrck -t 01Jan2002 -L7 i get the following:
nsrck: checking index for '$client'... (2 Replies)
why do inode indices starts from 1 unlike array indexes which starts from 0
its a question from "the design of unix operating system" of maurice j bach
id be glad if i get to know the answer quickly
:) (0 Replies)
brothers why inode index starts from 1 unlike array inex which starts from 0
its a question from the design of unix operating system of maurice j.bach
i need to know the answer urgently...someone help please (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a file (FileNames.txt) which contains the following data in it.
$ cat FileNames.txt
MYFILE17XXX208Sep191307.csv
MYFILE19XXX208Sep192124.csv
MYFILE20XXX208Sep192418.csv
MYFILE22XXX208Sep193234.csv
MYFILE21XXX208Sep193018.csv
MYFILE24XXX208Sep194053.csv... (5 Replies)
1 2 000060000
How do i return the point in the string where the 6 is?
i.e what I want on output is
1 2 5
something like awk '{print $1 $2 index($3,6) }'
but I can't get it to work
Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
HI All,
I would like to pass a integer and get all values under this index the by using awk. Could anyone help?
Thanks :>
input:
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
1,2,3,48,5,6,7
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
e.g. i pass 4 to awk command
output:
4
48
4
Video tutorial on how to use code tags in The UNIX and Linux... (8 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have postgresql server with huge amount of data, nearly 2 billion records. each record is at most 50 bytes(4 integer fields). I need to build index on all column to do fast reporting. but indexes becomes bloat after some time. almost 80% of database size is because of its huge... (0 Replies)
Hello Gents,
Please give a help with this case
Input
10001010G1
10001010G1
10001010G1
10001010G2
10001010G3
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001014G1
10001014G1
10001014G2 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jiam912
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
test::use::ok5.18
Test::use::ok(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::use::ok(3)NAME
Test::use::ok - Alternative to Test::More::use_ok
SYNOPSIS
use ok 'Some::Module';
DESCRIPTION
According to the Test::More documentation, it is recommended to run "use_ok()" inside a "BEGIN" block, so functions are exported at
compile-time and prototypes are properly honored.
That is, instead of writing this:
use_ok( 'Some::Module' );
use_ok( 'Other::Module' );
One should write this:
BEGIN { use_ok( 'Some::Module' ); }
BEGIN { use_ok( 'Other::Module' ); }
However, people often either forget to add "BEGIN", or mistakenly group "use_ok" with other tests in a single "BEGIN" block, which can
create subtle differences in execution order.
With this module, simply change all "use_ok" in test scripts to "use ok", and they will be executed at "BEGIN" time. The explicit space
after "use" makes it clear that this is a single compile-time action.
SEE ALSO
Test::More
CC0 1.0 Universal
To the extent possible under law, XX has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to Test-use-ok.
This work is published from Taiwan.
<http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0>
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 45:
Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in 'XX'. Assuming UTF-8
perl v5.18.2 2012-09-11 Test::use::ok(3)