I am sharing a code snippet.
I am getting a syntax error in line of subtraction that says something like:
syntax error: invalid arithmetic operator (error token is ".0985146")
This is the line that gives error.
Appreciate your help.
I'm trying to write a simple script that takes all the .tar.gz files in a directory and verifies them by using the gzip -tv command:
for zip in *.tar.gz
do
gzip -tv $zip
if ; then #Check return code from tar
echo "File ${zip} verified OK."
exit... (4 Replies)
hi i am using bash shell to perform some subraction. here is what i have:
i have a while loop and am using i as a counter.
diff= `expr ${ARRAY1} - ${ARRAY2}`
for example array1 has -0.7145 and array2 has -0.7041.
when i try the above command, i get expr: non-numeric argument. any... (6 Replies)
I am trying to create a shell that asks the user to enter their name, and compare it to my own by saying we have the same name or saying my name and that they have a nice name too. Here is my script...
#!/bin/bash-x
echo "Enter your name".
read name
if
then
echo "My name is Adam too"... (1 Reply)
howdy,
so I'm make a plugin work for Nagios, and the commandline is:
/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_mssql -H MySQLServerName -u MySqlAccountName -p MyPassword(#XXXXX -d MyDatabaseName
it is barfing with:
bash: syntax error near unexpected token `('
Thoughts?
Do I have to wrap something... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
i'm making some test on a data file. Imagine i have two columns inside it :
80377,20
80377,20
80379,19
80378,20
80380,20
80382,20
80381,21
Just to understand how can it works, imagine to subtract 100 to the number in the first column when the other one in the second... (4 Replies)
The below bash function uses multiple variables CODING, SAMPLE, SURVEY, andvariant
in it. The user selects the cap function and details are displayed on the screen using the $SURVEY variable, the directory is changed to $SAMPLE and the samples.txt is opened so the user can select the sample to... (6 Replies)
In the bash function below if the user selets "y" then the menu function is called and if they select "n" the move function is called. That all seems to work, my question is after the files are moved an echo,
line in bold is displayed and another function called backup is called. I am getting a... (1 Reply)
#!/bin/bash
#--------------------------------------------------------
# Setup prompt
# Author Zeeshan Mirza
# Data: 06-08-2017
#--------------------------------------------------------
if
then
. ./.profile_custom_pre
fi
umask 022
set -o vi
export EDITOR=vi
export VISUAL=vi... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: getzeeshan
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::synopsis
Test::Synopsis(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Synopsis(3pm)NAME
Test::Synopsis - Test your SYNOPSIS code
SYNOPSIS
# xt/synopsis.t (with Module::Install::AuthorTests)
use Test::Synopsis;
all_synopsis_ok();
# Or, run safe without Test::Synopsis
use Test::More;
eval "use Test::Synopsis";
plan skip_all => "Test::Synopsis required for testing" if $@;
all_synopsis_ok();
DESCRIPTION
Test::Synopsis is an (author) test module to find .pm or .pod files under your lib directory and then make sure the example snippet code in
your SYNOPSIS section passes the perl compile check.
Note that this module only checks the perl syntax (by wrapping the code with "sub") and doesn't actually run the code.
Suppose you have the following POD in your module.
=head1 NAME
Awesome::Template - My awesome template
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Awesome::Template;
my $template = Awesome::Template->new;
$tempalte->render("template.at");
=head1 DESCRIPTION
An user of your module would try copy-paste this synopsis code and find that this code doesn't compile because there's a typo in your
variable name $tempalte. Test::Synopsis will catch that error before you ship it.
VARIABLE DECLARATIONS
Sometimes you might want to put some undeclared variables in your synopsis, like:
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Data::Dumper::Names;
print Dumper($scalar, @array, \%hash);
This assumes these variables like $scalar are defined elsewhere in module user's code, but Test::Synopsis, by default, will complain that
these variables are not declared:
Global symbol "$scalar" requires explicit package name at ...
In this case, you can add the following POD sequence elsewhere in your POD:
=for test_synopsis
no strict 'vars'
Or more explicitly,
=for test_synopsis
my($scalar, @array, %hash);
Test::Synopsis will find these "=for" blocks and these statements are prepended before your SYNOPSIS code when being evaluated, so those
variable name errors will go away, without adding unnecessary bits in SYNOPSIS which might confuse users.
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
Goro Fuji blogged about the original idea at <http://d.hatena.ne.jp/gfx/20090224/1235449381> based on the testing code taken from
Test::Weaken.
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Test::Pod, Test::UseAllModules, Test::Inline, Test::Snippet
perl v5.10.1 2009-07-06 Test::Synopsis(3pm)