01-30-2017
Any system you will encounter nowadays will most likely contain a POSIX compliant shell. So I would code for that and I really do not see a need for backticks anymore.
There hardly is a reason nowadays why a new script would need to be able to run in a Bourne shell, which would require the backticks..
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Can someone explain the difference between backticks and system when
evaluated in these if statements:
sub getDate {
print "start date\n";
if ( system("/bin/date") ) {
print "can't get date\n";
exit(2);
}
print "finish date\n";
}
Returns the following:
start date
Thu... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gjkeenan
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi, I'm trying to do something like this: range= `expr `date '+%m'` - 1` and it does not work. How can I tell it to evaluate an expression within another expression evaluation? I was at first worried that `date '+%m'` would return a string but apparently expr does the math okay normally, so the... (3 Replies)
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I would like to change some lines in my mysql-dump, because there a syntax problems with some version of mysql.
I 'd like to change
USE ´someDatabase´;
to
USE someDatabase;
(without backticks) using the sed command in the shell
Thanks & best regards
Bernd (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bjb
5 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm always concerned I might be abusing backticks within my scripts. A current script I'm writing has this for example:
stripscriptname=`echo $scriptname | sed 's/\(.*\)\..*/\1/'`
stripsearch=`echo $searchpattern | tr -d ' ,/'`
Both of these variables are set inside the script (in fact,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mglenney
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hey all. Just a fast question, what is the technical difference between using back ticks and using xargs to perform a command?
Here's an example
Find /mydir -name *.conf |xargs rm
Vs
Rm 'find /mydir -name *.conf'
Is there a performance hit? I know they do the same thing but which is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: msarro
1 Replies
6. Red Hat
Hi everyone. This is a bit of a perl/linux mixed question. I am trying to redirect STDOUT of chsh by using the following line of perl code.
system ("chsh -s /sbin/nologin $testing 1>/dev/null");
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Input file:
'data_1'
'data_10'
'data1311'
'235data_13'
Desired output:
data_1
data_10
data1311
235data_13
Can I know how to remove back tick"'" in a file?
Many thanks for advice. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: perl_beginner
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have been testing a new script and cannot figure out why my `cat spath` will not execute on the remote machine?
sudo ssh -p 22344 -o "PasswordAuthentication no" -o "HostbasedAuthentication yes" -l testuser 192.168.1.6 "find `cat spath` -depth"
cat: spath: No such file or directory
but... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to make a dialog window that prints the output of grep that takes the output of find. Unfortunately my nested backticks don't work.
Here is the dialog window:
dialog --stdout --title "test" --backtitle "test" --msgbox "Test:\n `grep -l "${tablica}" `find $string``" 16 60I think I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Starting_Leaf
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
platform::shell
platform::shell(n) Tcl Bundled Packages platform::shell(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
platform::shell - System identification support code and utilities
SYNOPSIS
package require platform::shell ?1.1.4?
platform::shell::generic shell
platform::shell::identify shell
platform::shell::platform shell
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
The platform::shell package provides several utility commands useful for the identification of the architecture of a specific Tcl shell.
This package allows the identification of the architecture of a specific Tcl shell different from the shell running the package. The only
requirement is that the other shell (identified by its path), is actually executable on the current machine.
While for most platform this means that the architecture of the interrogated shell is identical to the architecture of the running shell
this is not generally true. A counter example are all platforms which have 32 and 64 bit variants and where a 64bit system is able to run
32bit code. For these running and interrogated shell may have different 32/64 bit settings and thus different identifiers.
For applications like a code repository it is important to identify the architecture of the shell which will actually run the installed
packages, versus the architecture of the shell running the repository software.
COMMANDS
platform::shell::identify shell
This command does the same identification as platform::identify, for the specified Tcl shell, in contrast to the running shell.
platform::shell::generic shell
This command does the same identification as platform::generic, for the specified Tcl shell, in contrast to the running shell.
platform::shell::platform shell
This command returns the contents of tcl_platform(platform) for the specified Tcl shell.
KEYWORDS
operating system, cpu architecture, platform, architecture
platform::shell 1.1.4 platform::shell(n)