Hi guys!
I was wondering what the outcome was of your survey of a few months ago? One of the questions was if people were willing to pay for additional services like an own account, like username@unix.com with mail box, etc.
Sorry if I missed the results if you had already posted them.
Ivo (1 Reply)
Hi there
If I run a 'swap -l' on my solaris box, i get
swapfile dev swaplo blocks free
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0s1 54,65 8 67119560 65655144
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0s2 54,65 8 33119522 32655122
I wanted to run a for loop adding up the totals of each column 4 , excluding the... (2 Replies)
I need some help with adding lines to file and substitute a pattern.
Ok I have a file:
#cat names.txt
name: John Doe
stationed: 1
name: Michael Sweets
stationed: 41
.
.
.
And would like to change it to:
name: John Doe
employed
permanently
stationed: 1-office (7 Replies)
I'm trying to add the paths of all the xml files in certain directories to an array. I want to use the array later in my code. Anyway, for some reason this isn't working. Any help would be appreciated.
Path_Counter=0
for result in "find * -name '*.xml'"; do
XmlPath="$result"
echo... (2 Replies)
Here is one I am baffled with; I have not used unix for a while and now that I am back it has been fun remembering and I have enjoyed it, for the most past. this is in ksh.
I need to search in a file for the line with X1 and cut columns 20-25, put them into a variable, added them (dollar... (3 Replies)
Hello ,
When using vim, can ctag and cscope support recording search results and displaying the history results ? Once I jump to one tag, I can use :tnext to jump to next tag, but how can I display the preview search result? (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to use awk to do the following:
For a column:
5
3
4
2
7
I want to start with the first entry then add the second to the first, third to second ..etc:
5
8
12
14
21 (5 Replies)
Good morning all,
This is the file name in question OD_Orders_2019-02-19.csv
I am trying to create a bash script to read into files with yesterdays date on the file name while retaining the rest of the files name. I would like for $y to equal, the name of the file with a formula output with... (2 Replies)
I have an array in an external file, "array.txt", which contains:
char *testarray={"Zero", "One", "Two", "Three", "Four", "Five", "Six", "Seven", "Eight", "Nine"};I want to be able to add an element to this array, and have that element display, whenever I call it, without having to recompile... (29 Replies)
Discussion started by: ignatius
29 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
alex
ALEX(1) Alex Lexical Analyser Generator ALEX(1)NAME
alex - the lexical analyser generator for Haskell
SYNOPSIS
alex [OPTION]... file [OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the alex command.
This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. Instead, it
has documentation in various other formats, including DVI, Info and HTML; see below.
Alex is a lexical analyser generator system for Haskell. It is similar to the tool lex or flex for C/C++.
Input files are expected to be of the form file.x and alex will produce output in file.y
Caveat: When using hbc (Chalmers Haskell) the command argument structure is slightly different. This is because the hbc run time system
takes some flags as its own (for setting things like the heap size, etc). This problem can be circumvented by adding a single dash (`-')
to your command line. So when using a hbc generated version of Alex, the argument structure is:
alex - [OPTION]... file [OPTION]...
OPTIONS
The programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`--'). A summary of options is included
below. For a complete description, see the other documentation.
-d, --debug
Instructs Alex to generate a lexer which will output debugging messsages as it runs.
-g, --ghc
Instructs Alex to generate a lexer which is optimised for compiling with GHC. The lexer will be significantly more efficient, both
in terms of the size of the compiled lexer and its runtime.
-o FILE, --outfile=FILE
Specifies the filename in which the output is to be placed. By default, this is the name of the input file with the .x suffix
replaced by .hs
-i [FILE], --info[=FILE]
Produces a human-readable rendition of the state machine (DFA) that Alex derives from the lexer, in FILE (default: file.info where
the input file is file.x ).
The format of the info file is currently a bit basic, and not particularly informative.
-v, --version
Print version information on standard output then exit successfully.
FILES
@DATADIR@
SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/alex, the Alex homepage (http://haskell.org/alex/) <http://haskell.org/alex/>
COPYRIGHT
Alex Version 3.0.1
Copyright (c) 1995-2003, Chris Dornan and Simon Marlow
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Ian Lynagh <igloo@debian.org>, based on the happy manpage, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used
by others).
Glasgow FP Suite 2003-09-09 ALEX(1)