Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Lottery number checker
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Lottery number checker Post 303012298 by gsiva on Thursday 1st of February 2018 11:03:40 PM
Old 02-02-2018
Hi Chubler,

The script worked out well with your modification.. Thanks a lot...
Between, I got what I expected.
Code:
[root@linux lottery]# sh script.sh
Enter numbers from 1 to 50 (35 to go): 2        19      47      1       46      3       6       11      15      17      26      29      32      34      40      44      48      49      5       7       9     13       22      23      25      27      45      4       8       10      14      16      18      30      35

Lottery Numbers: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 22 23 25 26 27 29 30 32 34 35 40 44 45 46 47 48 49

My Numbers                      #s Matched      Result
4 17 21 25 33 48                4               lose
10 24 26 28 32 44               4               lose
5 7 24 44 48 49                 5               lose
3 7 17 23 32 47                 6               win
5 28 34 36 38 45                3               lose
18 20 27 43 48 49               4               lose


But with this result, i need to generate the sequence of 6 nos within the 35 numbers i have mentioned and need to compare with the my_numbers file.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

spell checker program

2.I need shell script to list all the 'words' in a given file (text) that are not listed in a specified dictionary. Let us call this utility 'spell-check'. 'spell-check' will be called as follows. $ spell-check letter Lucent UNIX UNIX OS a $ dictionary words are listed in lower... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ksjanakan
2 Replies

2. Programming

Proxy Checker in C

Hello Everyone Im planning to make a C program to check a proxy server if it is working or bot, test the proxy speed ,response time , as well as a proxy type. i'm learning using libcurl right now to fetch http headers. do you guys have some links about how to check proxy headers?. Thank you. ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: magictalong
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Date format checker

Hi I want the user to enter a date in the format 16-APR-2000 . I need to put validations for that in my script .. Please help Thanks and Regards Ultimatix (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ultimatix
1 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

This Weeks Lottery - Jackpot Now 219,500 Bits

If you want to win some Bits, the jackpot for tomorrow's drawing is up to 219,500 Bits Lottery tickets are only 100 Bits :D (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

5. Homework & Coursework Questions

spell checker script

Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted! 1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: When "niuspell" is invoked from the command line it reads "file" and checks it for spelling of the words it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Jeffthrow5
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

64-32 architecture checker also OS version

hello is it possible to check systsme architecture and also system OS versions? like 32 bit centos 5 64 bit centos 6 how about cpu versions? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: nimafire
6 Replies

7. Debian

Getting a better spell checker

Guys I am new to Linux in general and want to know what is the use of the following files-: /usr/share/dict/words /usr/share/dict/words.pre-dictionaries-common Are they used by the spell checker to find potential typos ? If so are there any better larger word lists out there ? I am sure... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreyan32
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Lottery result checker

So, i made a simple lottery number generator like this: for i in `seq 10`; do seq 1 35 | shuf -n 7 | sort -g | tr '\n' ' ' ;echo; done i've file with winning numbers: Eg:1 10 15 20 25 30 35 2 6 10 14 18 22 26 My problem here is how to compare or check if my generated numbers are match... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: PuLPi
10 Replies

9. What is on Your Mind?

Nu Html Checker at w3.org

Started out today with around 350 errors or warnings using the Nu Html Checker. After working nearly 6 hours, it's down to only 6 (5 errors and 1 warning). What an accomplishment! LOL https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums215-picture943.png (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
2 Replies
Round(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						  Round(3)

NAME
Math::Round - Perl extension for rounding numbers SYNOPSIS
use Math::Round qw(...those desired... or :all); $rounded = round($scalar); @rounded = round(LIST...); $rounded = nearest($target, $scalar); @rounded = nearest($target, LIST...); # and other functions as described below DESCRIPTION
Math::Round supplies functions that will round numbers in different ways. The functions round and nearest are exported by default; others are available as described below. "use ... qw(:all)" exports all functions. FUNCTIONS
round LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest integer. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two integers are rounded "to infinity"; i.e., positive values are rounded up (e.g., 2.5 becomes 3) and negative values down (e.g., -2.5 becomes -3). round_even LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest integer. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two integers are rounded to the nearest even number; e.g., 2.5 becomes 2, 3.5 becomes 4, and -2.5 becomes -2. round_odd LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest integer. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two integers are rounded to the nearest odd number; e.g., 3.5 becomes 3, 4.5 becomes 5, and -3.5 becomes -3. round_rand LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest integer. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two integers are rounded up or down in a random fashion. For example, in a large number of trials, 2.5 will become 2 half the time and 3 half the time. nearest TARGET, LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest multiple of the target value. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two multiples of the target will be rounded to infinity. For example: nearest(10, 44) yields 40 nearest(10, 46) 50 nearest(10, 45) 50 nearest(25, 328) 325 nearest(.1, 4.567) 4.6 nearest(10, -45) -50 nearest_ceil TARGET, LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest multiple of the target value. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two multiples of the target will be rounded to the ceiling, i.e. the next algebraically higher multiple. For example: nearest_ceil(10, 44) yields 40 nearest_ceil(10, 45) 50 nearest_ceil(10, -45) -40 nearest_floor TARGET, LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest multiple of the target value. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two multiples of the target will be rounded to the floor, i.e. the next algebraically lower multiple. For example: nearest_floor(10, 44) yields 40 nearest_floor(10, 45) 40 nearest_floor(10, -45) -50 nearest_rand TARGET, LIST Rounds the number(s) to the nearest multiple of the target value. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are halfway between two multiples of the target will be rounded up or down in a random fashion. For example, in a large number of trials, "nearest(10, 45)" will yield 40 half the time and 50 half the time. nlowmult TARGET, LIST Returns the next lower multiple of the number(s) in LIST. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are between two multiples of the target will be adjusted to the nearest multiples of LIST that are algebraically lower. For example: nlowmult(10, 44) yields 40 nlowmult(10, 46) 40 nlowmult(25, 328) 325 nlowmult(.1, 4.567) 4.5 nlowmult(10, -41) -50 nhimult TARGET, LIST Returns the next higher multiple of the number(s) in LIST. TARGET must be positive. In scalar context, returns a single value; in list context, returns a list of values. Numbers that are between two multiples of the target will be adjusted to the nearest multiples of LIST that are algebraically higher. For example: nhimult(10, 44) yields 50 nhimult(10, 46) 50 nhimult(25, 328) 350 nhimult(.1, 4.512) 4.6 nhimult(10, -49) -40 VARIABLE
The variable $Math::Round::half is used by most routines in this module. Its value is very slightly larger than 0.5, for reasons explained below. If you find that your application does not deliver the expected results, you may reset this variable at will. STANDARD FLOATING-POINT DISCLAIMER Floating-point numbers are, of course, a rational subset of the real numbers, so calculations with them are not always exact. Numbers that are supposed to be halfway between two others may surprise you; for instance, 0.85 may not be exactly halfway between 0.8 and 0.9, and (0.75 - 0.7) may not be the same as (0.85 - 0.8). In order to give more predictable results, these routines use a value for one-half that is slightly larger than 0.5. Nevertheless, if the numbers to be rounded are stored as floating-point, they will be subject, as usual, to the mercies of your hardware, your C compiler, etc. AUTHOR
Math::Round was written by Geoffrey Rommel <GROMMEL@cpan.org> in October 2000. perl v5.18.2 2006-11-21 Round(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:11 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy