I need to find the line count of multiple strings in a particular file. The strings are as follows:
bmgcc
bmgccftp
bsmsftp
bulkftp
cctuneftp
crbtftp
crmpos
cso
gujhr
I am doing manual grep for each of the string to find the line count. The command i am using right now is:
grep mark... (3 Replies)
Guys I am having a problem with being able to do a count of entries in a file. What I am trying to get a count of the total number of members that are listed in the files. So I need to pull the number of the lines after members. I tried using sed but it only seems to count the first... (7 Replies)
Hey guys I am having a problem with being able to find unused profiles in a configuration check script I am trying to create for accountability purposes for managing a large number of systems. What I am trying to do is run a script that will look at the raw config data in a file and pull all the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I search all forum, but I can not find solutions of my problem :(
I have multiple files (5000 files), inside there is this data :
FILE 1:
1195.921 -898.995 0.750312E-02-0.497526E-02 0.195382E-05 0.609417E-05
-2021.287 1305.479-0.819754E-02 0.107572E-01 0.313018E-05 0.885066E-05
... (15 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that is 430K lines long. It has records like below
|site1|MAP
|site2|MAP
|site1|MODAL
|site2|MAP
|site2|MODAL
|site2|LINK
|site1|LINK
My task is to count the number of time MAP, MODAL, LINK occurs for a single site and write new records like below to a new file
... (5 Replies)
Good morning all,
I have a problem that is one step beyond a standard awk compare.
I would like to compare three files which have several thousand records against a fourth file. All of them have a value in each row that is identical, and one value in each of those rows which may be duplicated... (1 Reply)
Hello guys, I am quite new to Shell Scripting and I need help for this
I have a CSV file like this:
Requisition,Order,RequisitionLineNumber,OrderLineNumber
REQ1,Order1,1,1
REQ1,Order1,1,3
REQ2,Order2,1,5
Basically what I want to do is compare the first 3 fields
If all 3 fields are the same... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I thinking on how to accelerate the speed on calculate the dat file against the number of records CTRL file.
There are about 300 to 400 folder directories that contains both DAT and CTL files.
DAT contain all the flat files records
CTL is the reference check file for the... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have 10 fasta files with sequenced reads information with read sizes from 15 - 35 . I have combined the reads and collapsed in to unique reads and filtered for sizes 18 - 26 bp long unique reads. Now i wanted to count each unique read appearance in all the fasta files and make a table... (5 Replies)
Hello, I have two tab files with headers
File1: with 4 columns
header1 header2 header3 header4
44 a bb 1
57 c ab 4
64 d d 5
File2: with 26 columns
header1.. header5 header6 header7 ... header 22...header26
id1 44 a bb
id2 57 ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: nans
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
data::compare::plugins
Data::Compare::Plugins(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Data::Compare::Plugins(3)NAME
Data::Compare::Plugins - how to extend Data::Compare
DESCRIPTION
Data::Compare natively handles several built-in data types - scalars, references to scalars, references to arrays, references to hashes,
references to subroutines, compiled regular expressions, and globs. For objects, it tries to Do The Right Thing and compares the
underlying data type. However, this is not always what you want. This is especially true if you have complex objects which overload
stringification and/or numification.
Hence we allow for plugins.
FINDING PLUGINS
Data::Compare will try to load any module installed on your system under the various @INC/Data/Compare/Plugins/ directories. If there is a
problem loading any of them, an appropriate warning will be issued.
Because of how we find plugins, no plugins are available when running in "taint" mode.
WRITING PLUGINS
Internally, plugins are "require"d into Data::Compare. This means that they need to evaluate to true. We make use of that true value.
Where normally you just put:
1;
at the end of an included file, you should instead ensure that you return a reference to an array. This is treated as being true so
satisfies perl, and is a damned sight more useful.
Inside that array should be either a description of what this plugin is to do, or references to several arrays containing such
descriptions. A description consists of two or three items. First a string telling us what the first data-type handled by your plugin is.
Second, (and optional, defaulting to the same as the first) the second data-type to compare. To handle comparisons to ordinary scalars,
give the empty string for the data-type, ie:
['MyType', '', sub { ...}]
Third and last, we need a reference to the subroutine which does the comparison. That subroutine should expect to take two parameters,
which will be of the specified type. It should return 1 if they compare the same, or 0 if they compare different.
Be aware that while you might give a description like:
['Type1', 'Type2', sub { ... }]
this will handle both comparing Type1 to Type2, and comparing Type2 to Type1. ie, comparison is commutative.
If you want to use Data::Compare's own comparison function from within your handler (to, for example, compare a data structure that you
have stored somewhere in your object) then you will need to call it as Data::Compare::Compare. However, you must be careful to avoid
infinite recursion by calling D::C::Compare which in turn calls back to your handler.
The name of your plugins does not matter, only that it lives in one of those directories. Of course, giving it a sensible name means that
the usual installation mechanisms will put it in the right place, and meaningful names will make it easier to debug your code.
For an example, look at the plugin that handles Scalar::Properties objects, which is distributed with Data::Compare.
DISTRIBUTION
Provided that the above rules are followed I see no reason for you to not upload your plugin to the CPAN yourself. You will need to make
Data::Compare a pre-requisite, so that the CPAN.pm installer does the right thing.
Alternatively, if you would prefer me to roll your plugin in with the Data::Compare distribution, I'd be happy to do so provided that the
code is clear and well-commented, and that you include tests and documentation.
SEE ALSO
Data::Compare
Data::Compare::Plugins::Scalar::Properties
AUTHOR
Copyright (c) 2004 David Cantrell <david@cantrell.org.uk>. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.16.2 2009-03-07 Data::Compare::Plugins(3)