Had you tried my earlier suggestion, it worked. With one correction -- the HTML you posted was wrong, the tag is not named 'token', it is named 'sessionKey'.
Hi,
Is it possible to delcare hashes in KSH the way we do it in Perl.
Like I want to declare something like:
fruits="Juicy"
fruits="healthy"
fruits="sour"
echo fruits
Ofcourse this piece of code does not work in KSH. Please let me know if there is a way of doing it in KSH.
... (2 Replies)
Any clue to write something to a particular location in Perl?
Suppose
$line = ‘abc cde 1234”
How to write ( example string "test") on location 4 without parsing the whole line.
Output should be $line = ‘abctest 1234”
this is not search and replace. just to add substring into... (3 Replies)
Let's assume that I have a file with contents delimited by pipe:
"The mouse|ran up|the|clock"
"May|had a|little|lamb"
How would I use 'substr' to get the 3rd field. For example, "the" from the first line, and "little" from the second line?
# Loop over a file and read $LINE {
... (2 Replies)
Hi friends,
I have written a perl code and it works fine but I am not sure tommorow it works or not, please help me.
problem : When diff is 1 then success other than its failure but tomorrow its 20090401 and the enddate is 20090331. thats why I write the code this type but it does not work and... (1 Reply)
Hi Everyone,
$tmp="20090620231013";
$tmp = substr($tmp,0,8)." ".substr($tmp,8,2).":".substr($tmp,10,2).":".substr($tmp,12,2);
So my output is:
20090620 23:10:13.
I only can think substr is easy, any perl can do this just one line very simple efficient one? :eek:
Thanks (3 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
# cat a.txt
a;b;c;64O
a;b;c;d;ee;f
# cat a.pl
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my $tmp3 = ",,a,,b,,c,,d,,e,,f,,";
open(my $FA, "a.txt") or die "$!";
while(<$FA>) {
chomp;
my @tmp=split(/\;/, $_);
if ( ($tmp =~ m/^(64O)/i) || ($tmp... (3 Replies)
I want to match the number exactly from the variable which has multiple numbers seperated by pipe symbol similar to search in egrep.below is the code which i tried
#!/usr/bin/perl
my $searchnum = $ARGV;
my $num = "148|1|0|256";
print $num;
if ($searchnum =~ /$num/)
{
print "found";
}... (2 Replies)
I have a command like this:
listdb ID923 -l |gawk '{if (substr($0,37,1)==1 && NR == 3)print "YES" else if (substr ($0,37,1)==0 && NR == 3) print "NO"}'
This syntax doesn't work. But I was able to get this to work:
listdb ID923 -l |gawk '{if (substr($0,37,1)==1 && NR == 3)print "YES"}'
... (4 Replies)
awk '/^>/{id=$0;next}length>=7 { print id, "\n"$0}' Test.txt
Can I use substr to achieve the same task?
Thanks! (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Xterra
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
io::pipe
IO::Pipe(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide IO::Pipe(3pm)NAME
IO::Pipe - supply object methods for pipes
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Pipe;
$pipe = IO::Pipe->new();
if($pid = fork()) { # Parent
$pipe->reader();
while(<$pipe>) {
...
}
}
elsif(defined $pid) { # Child
$pipe->writer();
print $pipe ...
}
or
$pipe = IO::Pipe->new();
$pipe->reader(qw(ls -l));
while(<$pipe>) {
...
}
DESCRIPTION
"IO::Pipe" provides an interface to creating pipes between processes.
CONSTRUCTOR
new ( [READER, WRITER] )
Creates an "IO::Pipe", which is a reference to a newly created symbol (see the "Symbol" package). "IO::Pipe::new" optionally takes two
arguments, which should be objects blessed into "IO::Handle", or a subclass thereof. These two objects will be used for the system call
to "pipe". If no arguments are given then method "handles" is called on the new "IO::Pipe" object.
These two handles are held in the array part of the GLOB until either "reader" or "writer" is called.
METHODS
reader ([ARGS])
The object is re-blessed into a sub-class of "IO::Handle", and becomes a handle at the reading end of the pipe. If "ARGS" are given
then "fork" is called and "ARGS" are passed to exec.
writer ([ARGS])
The object is re-blessed into a sub-class of "IO::Handle", and becomes a handle at the writing end of the pipe. If "ARGS" are given
then "fork" is called and "ARGS" are passed to exec.
handles ()
This method is called during construction by "IO::Pipe::new" on the newly created "IO::Pipe" object. It returns an array of two objects
blessed into "IO::Pipe::End", or a subclass thereof.
SEE ALSO
IO::Handle
AUTHOR
Graham Barr. Currently maintained by the Perl Porters. Please report all bugs to <perlbug@perl.org>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1996-8 Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 IO::Pipe(3pm)