Hello everyone and let me start off by thanking anyone who can help with this.
I work for a company that uses Unix as one of their servers. I'm not at all familar with Unix beyond logging after I restart the server:rolleyes: I'm looking for some command that will bring me up a list of current... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a list of times:
...10:02
15:34
20:05
01:51
06:55
09:00
05:52...
That's just part of the list (its huge).
How do I go about selecting certain times, e.g. just between 23:00 and 05:00 ?? (4 Replies)
i have a list of numbers like this;
124
235
764
782
765
451
983
909
...
and i want to make a sum with the first 3 of them then the next 3 and so on.
124+235+764=1123
782+765+451=1998
...
some ideas? (4 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I want to add 20% to the values and get an output , please advise with script , awk etc,
# cat datafile.txt
50.4053
278.383
258.164
198.743
4657.66
12.7441
646.787
1.56836
23.2969
191.805
53.3096
1.12988
999.058
4100.29 (2 Replies)
If I had a word list with a large amount of words in it, how would I (using a unix command) add, say, 123 to the end of each word?
EDIT: The word list is stored in a large text file. I need a command that applies the ending to each word in the file and saves the result in a new text file. (7 Replies)
Hello,
i'm trying to implement the times() function and i'm programming in C.
I'm using the "struct tms" structure which consists of the fields:
The tms_utime structure member is the CPU time charged for the execution of user instructions of the calling process.
The tms_stime structure... (1 Reply)
I'm having some troubles setting an instance of postgreSQL to automatically start upon system boot. I have two servers running this app, one is automatically starting the service, the other is not. I'm attempting to use the "svcadmin" command, however, apparently when I run a "svcs -a" search, the... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a file with long list of numbers. This file contains only one column. These numbers are very large. I am using following command:
cat myfile.txt | awk '{ sum+=$1} END {print sum}'
The output is coming in scientific notation. How do I get the result in proper format?
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: angshuman
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
date::manip::lang
Date::Manip::Lang(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Date::Manip::Lang(3)NAME
Date::Manip::Lang - date manipulation routines (language initialization)
DESCRIPTION
This module is a series of routines, one per language, used to initialize the support for different languages in Date::Manip
ADDING A LANGUAGE
Adding a language is easily done. If you want to add a language, refer to the list of words and phrases given below. Translate them into
the desired language and email them to me.
Note that Date::Manip does support international character sets, so if there are non-ASCII characters in the words, it's not a problem. Be
sure to include an ASCII representation as well that can be used in cases where non-ASCII characters might cause problems. In many cases,
alternate spellings are allowed, and there may be multiple words or phrases which fit, so please include all of them (with ASCII
representations for any that include non-ASCII characters).
Please translate ALL of the following. In some cases, a phrase is given in parentheses. It is not necessary to translate the phrase.
They're there to show the word in the correct context.
month names (January February ...)
abbreviations (Jan Feb ...)
day name (Monday Tuesday ... Sunday)
abbreviation (Mon Tue ... Sun)
short abbrev. (M T ... S)
number suffix (1st 2nd ... 31st)
spelled out (first second ... thirty-first
now
today
tomorrow
yesterday
last (last day of the month)
each (each Tuesday of the month)
of (first day of the week)
at (at 3:00)
on (on Tuesday)
next (next Tuesday)
last (last Tuesday)
exactly (in exactly 3 hours)
approximately (in approximately 3 hours)
business (in 4 business days)
Some times of the day are named. At the very least, there is
probably noon and midnight. Provide all named times, and the
time of day.
noon 12:00:00
midnight 00:00:00
The delta field names can be written or abbreviated in many differet
ways. Provide all names and abbreviations for the seven fields. For
example:
years/year/yrs/yr/y
months/month/mon
weeks/week/wk/wks/w
days/day/d
hours/hour/hr/hrs
minutes/minute/min/mn
seconds/second/sec/s
What words/phrases can be used to say that a time is in the future? E.g.
IN 3 hours
3 hours LATER
3 hours IN THE FUTURE
In the past?
3 hours AGO
3 hours PAST
Does the language have an equivalent of the English AM/PM? If so,
what are all possible values of each?
Other than a comma or period, are there any common integer/decimal
separators? For example: 1.25 can be expressed as 1.25 or 1,25
commonly. Are there any other ways?
When expressing time the hours/minutes and minutes/seconds are
typically separated by colons. Are there any other separators?
If so, what combinations of the separators are used in real life?
For example: 05h30:00.
NOTE: there must be the same number of sephm and sepms values
and the first sephm corresponds to the first sepms, etc.
AUTHOR
Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org)
You can always get the newest beta version of Date::Manip (which may fix problems in the current CPAN version... and may add others) from
my home page:
http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~sbeck/
perl v5.12.1 2010-01-12 Date::Manip::Lang(3)