Thanks for that hint. i have tried to push the following variables into the -v, so command looks like this:
Note the $1 is the first argument given to the script (the hostname for example)
it takes a while, meaning that it fails. Running it with a verbose mode, i could see that variable assignment MDIR is taken into account as it displays the whole path including the $1 variable, however it seems i'm doing something wrong in the getline < "MDIR". I tried also removing the "<"
Hi,
I've a question on awk. In English I want to:
(a) open a file, (b) search through the file for records where length of field15 > 20 characters and (c) print out some fields in the record.
I've written the following and it works OK. The trouble is this will ALWAYS write out the column... (5 Replies)
Hello I have the following awk script:
BEGIN {
{FS = " " }
{print "\t\tIllegal Loggon Attempts on MAIL\n"}
{"date" | getline d}
{printf "\t %s\n",d }
{print "Loggon Name\t\t\t Number of Attempts\n"}
... (2 Replies)
I'd like to define an alias to awk's begin statement since I use awk with different delimiters all the time and it is tiresome to type awk '{OFS="\t";FS="\t"}{BLAH BLAH}' every time. The problem is that bash won't let me make an alias with an open quote, which is necessary for the BEGIN alias to... (3 Replies)
I am beginner in awk
awk 'BEGIN{for(i=1;(getline<"opnoise")>0;i++) arr=$1}{print arr}'
In the above script, opnoise is a file, I am reading it into an array and then printing the value corresponding to index 20. Well this is not my real objective, but I have posted this example to describe... (1 Reply)
Hi All
I am not able to understand the usage of d# in the below variable declaration.
FILE_LOC contains the directory path
And also help me to know about what will be saved in the variable j.
Thanks!!!
j=${d#${FILE_LOC}/} (2 Replies)
I'm new to awk, trying to understand the basics.
I'm trying to reset the counter everytime the program gets a new file to check.
I figured in the BEGIN part it would work, but it doesn't.
#!/bin/awk -f
BEGIN {counter=0}
{
sum=0
for ( i=1; i<=NF;... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have written below script to begin if the line has n
#!/bin/ksh
/usr/xpg4/bin/awk {/ n / 'BEGIN {X = "01"; X = "02"; X = "03"; X = "04";
X = "05"; X = "06"; X = "07"; X = "08";
X ="09"; X = "10"; X = "11"; X = "12"; };}
NR > 1 {print $1 "\t" $5 "," X "," $6 " " $7}'} input.txt |... (9 Replies)
My code fails to do anything if I've BEGIN block in it:
Run the awk script as:
awk -f ~/bin/sum_dupli_gene.awk make_gene_probe.txt
#!/usr/bin/awk -f
BEGIN {
print ARGV
#--loads of stuff
}
END{
#more stuff
} (14 Replies)
Hi there,
I'm working with file more than 400K lines, 60 columns. Column count is going to be multiple of 12: 60, 12, 72 or so.
NF/12 gives me on how many iterations I've to do to check certain value.
For example: 7, 14th if only 24 columns in file.
7th, 14th and 21st if 36 columns in... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: genome
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
test::use::ok5.18
Test::use::ok(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::use::ok(3)NAME
Test::use::ok - Alternative to Test::More::use_ok
SYNOPSIS
use ok 'Some::Module';
DESCRIPTION
According to the Test::More documentation, it is recommended to run "use_ok()" inside a "BEGIN" block, so functions are exported at
compile-time and prototypes are properly honored.
That is, instead of writing this:
use_ok( 'Some::Module' );
use_ok( 'Other::Module' );
One should write this:
BEGIN { use_ok( 'Some::Module' ); }
BEGIN { use_ok( 'Other::Module' ); }
However, people often either forget to add "BEGIN", or mistakenly group "use_ok" with other tests in a single "BEGIN" block, which can
create subtle differences in execution order.
With this module, simply change all "use_ok" in test scripts to "use ok", and they will be executed at "BEGIN" time. The explicit space
after "use" makes it clear that this is a single compile-time action.
SEE ALSO
Test::More
CC0 1.0 Universal
To the extent possible under law, XX has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to Test-use-ok.
This work is published from Taiwan.
<http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0>
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 45:
Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in 'XX'. Assuming UTF-8
perl v5.18.2 2012-09-11 Test::use::ok(3)