Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Read command
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Read command Post 302980975 by itkamaraj on Monday 5th of September 2016 10:14:34 PM
Old 09-05-2016
use elif

Code:
echo Is this pre or post?
read pre
if [ "$pre" == "pre" ]
 then echo You have typed pre.
elif [ "$pre" == "post" ]
 then echo You have typed pre.
else
echo "valid options are pre and post"
 fi

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

read command

'Morning vmstat 1 1|sed 1,2d|awk '{printf("%s\n",$1)}'|read var echo $var This syntax run on AIX (ksh) but not on linux (bash). I think that problem is the read command, because the following syntax is ok : vmstat 1 1|sed 1,2d|awk '{printf("%s\n",$1)}' Could someone help me! regards... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: nymus7
16 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

read command

I have file which is space filled likE below Note: here spaces are replaced by |. When I use read command to read this file all the spaces are truncated only the default space is not removed. The output is Note: here spaces are replaced by |. Can this default truncation be override? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: COD
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regarding read command

Hi all, What does -u option indicates in read command. while read -u var1 do . . done < file.txt (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: krishna_gnv
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

read command in while

hi all iam not able use read command in the while loop in the following program while read line do echo $line echo "enter name" read name echo "your have entered $name" done < work.txt THE READ COMMAND INSIDE THE WHILE LOOP IS NOT WORKING, IS ANY OTHER WAY TO SOLVE THIS... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: avi.skynet
7 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

read command

Is there a way to use the READ command and force the user to enter a non-zero length string? If the user enters a zero length string the user input is rejected. code: print "what is the answer: \n" read answer (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: djehresmann
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Read command

Hi everyone, I have problem while writing a shell script for linux (Red Hat). First I need to create a read command. I tried to google this but so far I can't sort this out. I hope you will be able to help me. I have to read a file like this : GESTION_DATA_SET_variable1_variable2 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aswex
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

read command - using output from command substitution

Hey, guys! Trying to research this is such a pain since the read command itself is a common word. Try searching "unix OR linux read command examples" or using the command substitution keyword. :eek: So, I wanted to use a command statement similar to the following. This is kinda taken... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ProGrammar
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

read command

Hello guys, I am trying to a script that reads from key board and use the entered value in the next step. Example: enter folder name read $folder (i will give work) cd /main/$folder/ pwd it should print /main/work ---------- Post updated at 03:31 PM ----------... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sharath24
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read from file and execute the read command

Hi, I am facing issues with the below: I have a lookup file say lookup.lkp.This lookup.lkp file contains strings delimited by comma(,). Now i want to read this command from file and execute it. So my code below is : Contents in the lookup.lkp file is : c_e,m,a,`cd $BOX | ls cef_*|tail... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: vital_parsley
7 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Need help with read command

Is there a way to make the input of the read command (or some similar command that I'm unaware of) not visible, or with an astrix?? An example: #!/bin/bash # Example echo; echo "Who are you??"; read name if ; then echo "Welcome, the terminal is yours."; exit else "Stranger... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Huitzilopochtli
2 Replies
DelimMatch(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     DelimMatch(3)

NAME
Text::DelimMatch - Perl extension to find regexp delimited strings with proper nesting SYNOPSIS
use Text::DelimMatch; $mc = new Text::DelimMatch, $startdelim, $enddelim; $mc->quote('"'); $mc->escape("\"); $mc->double_escape('"'); $mc->case_sensitive(1); ($prefix, $match, $remainder) = $mc->match($string); ($prefix, $nextmatch, $remainder) = $mc->match(); $middle = $mc->strip_delim($match); # returns $match w/o start and end delim DESCRIPTION
These routines allow you to match delimited substrings in a buffer. The delimiters can be specified with any regular expression and the start and end delimiters need not be the same. If the delimited text is properly nested, entire nested groups are returned. In addition, you may specify quoting and escaping characters that contribute to the recognition of start and end delimiters. For example, if you specify the start and end delimiters as '(' and ')', respectively, and the double quote character as a quoting character, and the backslash as an escaping character, then the delimited substring in this buffer is "(ma(t)c)h)": 'prefix text "(quoted text)" (escaped " text) (ma(t)c)h) postfix text' In order to support this rather complex interface, the matching context is encapsulated in an object. The object, Text::DelimMatch, has the following public methods: new $start, $end, $escape, $dblesc, $qs1, $qe1, ... $qsn, $qen Creates a new object. All of the arguments are optional, and can be set with other methods, but they must be passed in the specified order: start delimiter, end delimiter, escape characters, double escape characters, and a set of quote characters. match $string In an array context, returns ($pre, $match, $post) where $pre is the text preceding the first match, $match is the matched text (including the delimiters), and $post is the rest of the text in the buffer. In a scalar context, returns $match. If $string is not provided on subsequent calls, the $post from the previous match is used, unless keep is false. If keep is false, the match always fails. strip_delim $string Returns $string with the start and end delimiters removed. delim $start, $end Set the start and end delimiters. Only one set of delimiters can be in use at any one time. Returns the delimters in use before this call. quote $startq, $endq Specifies the start and end quote characters. Multiple quote character pairs are supported, so this function is additive. To clear the current settings, pass no arguments, e.g., $mc->quote(). If only $start is passed, $end is assumed to be the same. In matching, quotes occur in pairs. In other words, if (",") and (',') are both specified as quote pairs and a string beginning with " is found, it is ended only by another ", not by '. Returns the quote hash in use before this call. escape $esc Specifies a set of escaping characters. This can only be a string of characters. $esc can be a regexp set or a simple string. If it is a simple string, it will be translated into the regexp set "[ quotemeta($esc) ]". Returns the escape characters in use before this call. double_escape $esc Specifies a set of double-escaping characters, i.e., characters that are considered escaped if they occur in pairs. For example, in some languages, 'Don''t you see?' defines a string containing a single apostrophe. $esc can only be a string of characters. $esc can be a regexp set or a simple string. If it is a simple string, it will be translated into the regexp set "[ quotemeta($esc) ]". Returns the double-escaping characters in use before this call. case_sensitive $bool Sets case sensitivity to $bool or true if $bool is not specified. Returns the case sensitivity in use before this call. keep $bool Sets keep to $bool or true if $bool is not specified. Keep, which is true by default, specifies whether or not the matching context object keeps a local copy of the buffer used in matching. Keeping a local copy allows repeated matching on the same buffer, but might be a bad idea if the buffer is a terabyte long. ;-) Returns the keep setting in use before this call. returndelim $bool Sets returndelim to $bool or true if $bool is not specified. Returndelim, which is true by default, specifies whether or not the start and end delimiters are returned with the matching string. Returns the returndelim setting in use before this call. error $seterr Returns the last error that occured. If $seterr is passed, the error is set to that value. Some common kinds of bad input are detected and an error condition is raised. If an error condition is raised, all matching fails until the error is cleared. The most common error is a bad regular expression, for example specifing the start delimiter as "(" instead of "\(". Remember, these are regexps! pre_matched Returns the prefix text from the last match if keep is true. Sets an error and returns an empty string if keep is false. matched Returns the matched text from the last match if keep is true. Sets an error and returns an empty string if keep is false. post_matched Returns the postfix text from the last match if keep is true. Sets an error and returns an empty string if keep is false. debug $bool Sets debug to $bool or true if $bool is not specified. If debug is true, informative and progress messages are printed to STDOUT by some methods. Returns the debugging setting in use before this call. dump For debugging, prints all of the instance variables for a particular object. slow $bool For debugging. Some classes of delimited strings can be located with much faster algorithms than can be used in the most general case. If slow is true, the slower, general algorithm is always used. For simplicity, and backward compatibility with the previous (limited release) incarnation of this module, the following functions are also available directly: nested_match ($string, $start, $end, $three) If $three is true, returns ($pre, $match, $post) in an array context otherwise returns ("$pre$match", $post). In a scalar context, returns "$pre$match". skip_nested_match ($string, $start, $end, $three) If $three is true, returns ($pre, $match, $post) in an array context otherwise returns ("$pre$match", $post). In a scalar context, returns $post. EXAMPLES
$mc = new Text::DelimMatch '"'; $mc->('pre "match" post') == '"match"'; $mc->delim("\(", "\)"); $mc->('pre (match) post') == ('pre ', '(match)', ' post'); $mc->('pre (ma(t)ch) post') == ('pre ', '(ma(t)ch)', ' post'); $mc->quote('"'); $mc->escape("\"); $mc->('pre (ma")"tch) post') == ('pre ', '(ma")"tch)', ' post'); $mc->('pre (ma(t)c)h") post') == ('pre ', '(ma(t)c)h")', ' post'); See also test.pl in the distribution. AUTHOR
Norman Walsh, ndw@nwalsh.com COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1997-2002 Norman Walsh. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. WARRANTY
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO
perl(1). perl v5.12.1 2003-05-20 DelimMatch(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:15 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy