Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Uniform Spacing in the message Post 302983911 by hasn318 on Tuesday 18th of October 2016 11:33:40 AM
Old 10-18-2016
Code:
tabs=15

did not help, still the same output with no uniform spacing
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

spacing problem

Hi guys, I have this little code: for directory in / $(echo $path | tr '/' ' ' ) do cd $directory echo "$(ls -ld | cut -c2-10 | sed 's/.\{3\}/& /' | sed 's/.\{7\}/& /' | sed 's/.\{1\}/& /g')" " $directory" done The output of this will be showing the permissions with spaces so it will... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: darkhider
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Uniform length for all the lines in file

Hi, I have a file with different width for each line. like first line with 45characters and second line of 30 characters. But I want to make all the lines to 45 characters in file. Appreciate your inputs Thanks Arun: (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: arund_01
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

reformating non-uniform strings

I have a set of free-form phone numbers that are not uniform and I want to reformat them into a standard uniform string. These are embedded at the end of a colon seperated file built by a large nawk + tr piping like such: XXXXX:YYYYY:ZZZZZ:(333)333-3333x33333 XXXXX:YYYYY:ZZZZZ:x44444... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: lordsmiter
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

uniform and same result whois command line

I am looking for a free whois lookup tool or some "scripting help" that will give uniform result for whois lookup from the linux command line. Currently: whois of a .co.nz domain results nameserver as follows. ns_name_01: ns1.domain.co.nz ns_name_02: ns2.domain.co.nz While that of a .net... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: anilcliff
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching for strings amongst non-uniform data

Hi Guys, I have a source file which contains significant strings amongst a lot of dross in non-uniform format, I'd like to search the input file for any examples of data from my reference file, and then output any matches to a list (text file). I've made something that achieves this, it's... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gazza86
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help with the spacing

while IFS="" read r; do printf "XXX\t%s\n" "$r" done < test1.txt > test.txt The issue is, XXX wud be a dummy column/row added to the file..But i want this XXX column to be a separated as a TAB Delimiter it should be something like XXX 1 XXX 2 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: saggiboy10
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How can I format a text file into uniform columns?

I have a file : e.g. Charles Dixon Age 23 Hometown Darlington Postcode DL1 2DC Fred Bixton Age 34 Hometown Leeds Postcode LS1 5XS Jim Davis Age 48 Hometown Cardiff CF2 8YY Is it possible to format this file into uniform columns using, say, the spaces as... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: bigbuk
11 Replies

8. AIX

Uniform LUN size

Hi, Is there any advantage is making all my storage LUNS ( hdisk ) of uniform size. Currently the LUN's are having different size () eg: 50G / 60G / 75G etc ). I am planning for a storage migration....so should i go for uniform lun size or with current LUN size pattern ? Regards, jibu (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jibujacob
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Fill in missing rows with zero to have uniform table

Hello, I have two files of same structure except some rows are missing randomly in each file. How do I fill the missing rows to have the exact ID column (S01 ~ S96) and rest columns filled with "0" with awk? The purpose of this step is to join the two files side by side. The closest thread is... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
17 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Fastest alternatives to flattening a non-uniform nested array with regex?

Hello, I'm looking at simplfying a function that flattens an array, it uses recursion and filters objects by type but this seems to be a waste of resources to me at least, using conditionals like this seems like a bad idea. The array can be a generic type, int, string, float but not some... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: f77hack
2 Replies
Log::Dispatch::Email(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Log::Dispatch::Email(3)

NAME
Log::Dispatch::Email - Base class for objects that send log messages via email SYNOPSIS
package Log::Dispatch::Email::MySender use Log::Dispatch::Email; use base qw( Log::Dispatch::Email ); sub send_email { my $self = shift; my %p = @_; # Send email somehow. Message is in $p{message} } DESCRIPTION
This module should be used as a base class to implement Log::Dispatch::* objects that send their log messages via email. Implementing a subclass simply requires the code shown in the SYNOPSIS with a real implementation of the "send_email()" method. CONSTRUCTOR
The constructor takes the following parameters in addition to the standard parameters documented in Log::Dispatch::Output: o subject ($) The subject of the email messages which are sent. Defaults to "$0: log email" o to ($ or @) Either a string or a list reference of strings containing email addresses. Required. o from ($) A string containing an email address. This is optional and may not work with all mail sending methods. o buffered (0 or 1) This determines whether the object sends one email per message it is given or whether it stores them up and sends them all at once. The default is to buffer messages. METHODS
o send_email(%p) This is the method that must be subclassed. For now the only parameter in the hash is 'message'. o flush If the object is buffered, then this method will call the "send_email()" method to send the contents of the buffer and then clear the buffer. o DESTROY On destruction, the object will call "flush()" to send any pending email. AUTHOR
Dave Rolsky, <autarch@urth.org> perl v5.12.1 2009-09-22 Log::Dispatch::Email(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:41 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy