Sponsored Content
Operating Systems HP-UX awk command in hp UNIX subtract 30 days automatically from current date without date illegal option Post 303027773 by kmarcus on Monday 24th of December 2018 03:37:08 AM
Old 12-24-2018
no it doesn't have ksh93 I have Version 11/16/88 the very first 88 release on the HP UX server namely
Code:
/bin/ksh:
         $ B.11.31  Oct  1 2008 01:54:10 $
        Version 11/16/88
         blok.c $Date: 2008/08/20 12:15:51 $Revision: r11.31/1 PATCH_11.31 (PHCO_38683)
         expand.c $Date: 2008/10/28 10:48:37 $Revision: r11.31/1 PATCH_11.31 (PHCO_38683)
         builtin.c $Date: 2007/10/25 15:12:29 $Revision: r11.31/1 PATCH_11.31 (PHCO_37285)
         test.c $Date: 2008/05/01 15:55:23 $Revision: r11.31/1 PATCH_11.31 (PHCO_38162)
         strdata.c $Date: 2008/08/25 18:24:40 $Revision: r11.31/1 PATCH_11.31 (PHCO_38683)
         $Revision: @(#) ksh88 R11.31_BL2009_0729_2 PATCH_11.31 PHCO_38683


Last edited by Don Cragun; 12-24-2018 at 05:24 AM.. Reason: Add missing CODE tags again.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find a date which is 7 days past when given current date

hii all. I have to get the date of the 7th day past from the current date. if i give the current date as sep 3 then i must get the date as 27th of august. can we get the values from the "cal" command. cal | awk '{print $2}' will this type of command work. actually my need is if today is... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: ladtony
17 Replies

2. Solaris

date -d illegal option in Solaris

Hi All, Is it possible to run date -d option in Solaris? Do we have a work around so that -d option will be recognized by solaris as it is recognized by linux. I need this since i am using this in scripting and it works in Linux box. my problem is it doesn't work in solaris box. ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: linuxgeek
6 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to get what date was 28 days ago of the current system date IN UNIX

Hi, Anybody knows how to get what date was 28 days ago of the current system date through UNIX script. Ex : - If today is 28th Mar 2010 then I have to delete the files which arrived on 1st Mar 2010, (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: kandi.reddy
15 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Date after 5 days from current date in YYYYMMDD format

Hello Experts, How do i get date after 5 days from current date in YYYYMMDD format? How do you compare date in YYYYMMDD format? Thanks (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: needyourhelp10
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

date: illegal option -- d in sun solaris

Hi all, I am trying to execute the following command in a sun solaris machine and getting the error as below. bash-2.03$ date -d "1 day ago" +%Y%m%d date: illegal option -- d bash-2.03$ uname -a SunOS gtrd02 5.8 Generic_117350-55 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440 Can anybody help me to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Tuxidow
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to Get 60 days Old date from current date in KSH script

Hi i am writing a cron job. so for it i need the 60 days old date form current date in variable. Like today date is 27 jan 2011 then output value will be stote in variable in formet Nov 27. i am using EST date, and tried lot of solution and see lot of post but it did not helpful for me. so... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Himanshu_soni
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Number of days between the current date and user defined date

I am trying to find out the number of days between the current date and user defined date. I took reference from here for the date2jd() function. Modified the function according to my requirement. But its not working properly. Original code from here is working fine. #!/bin/sh... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hiten.r.chauhan
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Seven days past date from current date

hi all.. i want 2 know how 2 find 7days past date from current date.. when i used set datetime = `date '+%m%d%y'` i got 060613.. i just want to know hw to get 053013.. i tried using date functions but couldnt get it :( i use c shell and there is no chance that i can change that ..... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rahul619
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Subscribers with Date 90 days older than current date

I have to display only those subscribers which are in "unconnected state" and the date is 90 days older than today's date. Below command is used for this purpose: cat vfsubscriber_20170817.csv | sed -e 's/^"//' -e '1d' | nawk -F '",' '{if ( (substr($11,2,4) == 2017) && ( substr($11,2,8) -lt... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dia
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Subtract a file's modification date with current date

SunOS -s 5.10 Generic_147440-04 sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise Hi, In a folder, there are files. I have a script which reads the current date and subtract the modification date of each file. How do I achieve this? Regards, Joe (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: roshanbi
2 Replies
VecStat(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					      VecStat(3pm)

NAME
Math::VecStat - Some basic numeric stats on vectors SYNOPSIS
use Math::VecStat qw(max min maxabs minabs sum average); $max=max(@vector); $max=max(@vector); ($max,$imax)=max(@vector); ($max,$imax)=max(@vector); $min=min(@vector); $min=min(@vector); ($max,$imin)=min(@vector); ($max,$imin)=min(@vector); $max=maxabs(@vector); $max=maxabs(@vector); ($max,$imax)=maxabs(@vector); ($max,$imax)=maxabs(@vector); $min=minabs(@vector); $min=minabs(@vector); ($max,$imin)=minabs(@vector); ($max,$imin)=minabs(@vector); $sum=sum($v1,$v2,...); $sum=sum(@vector); $sum=sum(@vector); $average=average($v1,$v2,...); $av=average(@vector); $av=average(@vector); $ref=vecprod($scalar,@vector); $ok=ordered(@vector); $ok=ordered(@vector); $ref=sumbyelement(@vector1,@vector2); $ref=diffbyelement(@vector1,@vector2); $ok=allequal(@vector1,@vector2); $ref=convolute(@vector1,@vector2); DESCRIPTION
This package provides some basic statistics on numerical vectors. All the subroutines can take a reference to the vector to be operated on. In some cases a copy of the vector is acceptable, but is not recommended for efficiency. max(@vector), max(@vector) return the maximum value of given values or vector. In an array context returns the value and the index in the array where it occurs. min(@vector), min(@vector) return the minimum value of given values or vector, In an array context returns the value and the index in the array where it occurs. maxabs(@vector), maxabs(@vector) return the maximum value of absolute of the given values or vector. In an array context returns the value and the index in the array where it occurs. minabs(@vector), minabs(@vector) return the minimum value of the absolute of the given values or vector. In an array context returns the value and the index in the array where it occurs. sum($v1,$v2,...), sum(@vector), sum(@vector) return the sum of the given values or vector average($v1,$v2,..), average(@vector), average(@vector) return the average of the given values or vector vecprod($a,$v1,$v2,..), vecprod($a,@vector), vecprod( $a, @vector ) return a vector built by multiplying the scalar $a by each element of the @vector. ordered($v1,$v2,..), ordered(@vector), ordered(@vector) return nonzero iff the vector is nondecreasing with respect to its index. To be used like if( ordered( $lowBound, $value, $highBound ) ){ instead of the (slightly) more clumsy if( ($lowBound <= $value) && ($value <= $highBound) ) { sumbyelement( @array1, @array2 ), diffbyelement(@array1,@array2) return the element-by-element sum or difference of two identically-sized vectors. Given $s = sumbyelement( [10,20,30], [1,2,3] ); $d = diffbyelement( [10,20,30], [1,2,3] ); $s will be "[11,22,33]", $d will be "[9,18,27]". allequal( @array1, @array2 ) returns true if and only if the two arrays are numerically identical. convolute( @array1, @array2 ) return a reference to an array containing the element-by-element product of the two input arrays. I.e., $r = convolute( [1,2,3], [-1,2,1] ); returns a reference to [-1,4,3] median evaluates the median, i.e. an element which separates the population in two halves. It returns a reference to a list whose first element is the median value and the second element is the index of the median element in the original vector. $a = Math::VecStat::median( [9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1] ); returns the list reference [ 5, 4 ] i.e. the median value is 5 and it is found at position 4 of the original array. If there are several elements of the array having the median value, e.g. [1,3,3,3,5]. In this case we choose always the first element in the original vector which is a median. In the example, we return [3,1]. =back =head1 HISTORY $Log: VecStat.pm,v $ Revision 1.9 2003/04/20 00:49:00 spinellia@acm.org Perl 5.8 broke test 36, exposing inconsistency in C<median>. Fixed, thanks to david@jamesgang.com. Revision 1.8 2001/01/26 11:10:00 spinellia@acm.org Added function median. Fixed test, thanks to Andreas Marcel Riechert <riechert@pobox.com> Revision 1.7 2000/10/24 15:28:00 spinellia@acm.org Added functions allequal diffbyelement Created a reasonable test suite. Revision 1.6 2000/06/29 16:06:37 spinellia@acm.org Added functions vecprod, convolute, sumbyelement Revision 1.5 1997/02/26 17:20:37 willijar Added line before pod header so pod2man installs man page correctly Revision 1.4 1996/02/20 07:53:10 willijar Added ability to return index in array contex to max and min functions. Added minabs and maxabs functions. Thanks to Mark Borges <mdb@cdc.noaa.gov> for these suggestions. Revision 1.3 1996/01/06 11:03:30 willijar Fixed stupid bug that crept into looping in min and max functions Revision 1.2 1995/12/26 09:56:38 willijar Oops - removed xy data functions. Revision 1.1 1995/12/26 09:39:07 willijar Initial revision BUGS
Let me know. I welcome any appropriate additions for this package. AUTHORS
John A.R. Williams <J.A.R.Williams@aston.ac.uk> Andrea Spinelli <spinellia@acm.org> perl v5.12.4 2011-07-11 VecStat(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:42 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy