Hi all,
I have a problem in handling files through C.
here is the problem im having:
i will query the database (for instance consider employees table )
for empno,ename,job,salary fields.The query returns me some 100 of rows. now i need to place them in a file in row wise pattern as they... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I got a little issue here. Imagine that I have more than one process accessing one file. Is it possible to know which process(es) are accessing that file when I open the file??
Thanks for the help.
Best regards,
Ernesto (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a log file which runs into 3 to 5 GB.
We store this typically for 6 months. When a new month starts we move the previous month into a 9 month back up log (file.9m) and delete the last month of the 9 month back up.
Iam using awk to find the data and cat to join the files like... (3 Replies)
sir i have to get first line from a file
for example
>cat file1
abc
zxc
asd
adsf
from that file1 i need only first line
expected result
>abc
please help me ! (1 Reply)
my input for a script is another csv file
but in that file say 7 lines are there ...
how can i get line by line to that input
for example :
>cat link.csv
www.yahoo.com,yahoo
www.google.com,google
www.unix.com,unix
another file
in that file i need to ping the above links
... (2 Replies)
I have been doing automation of daily check activity for a server, i have been using sqls to retrive the data and while loop for reading the data from the file for several activities. BUT i got a show stopper the below one.. where the data is getting store in $temp_file, but not being read by while... (1 Reply)
$# some text
$$ some text
$@ some text
$$. some text
Mg1 some text
Mg2 some text
.
.
.
Mg10 some text
The above 10 lines are to be extracted except the lines starting from $#,$$.,... (4 Replies)
Specifically on RHEL 5.7.
When does the underlying ksh process open and close files? Every time they're accessed, or as little as possible?
Say you have some script like:
CreateFiles()
{
grep "<VALUE1>" ${infile} >> ${outfile}
grep "<VALUE2>" ${infile} >> ${outfile}
...... (4 Replies)
Hi Team,
I am trying to cut a large file into multiple files. It has
Header
50,050 records
Trailer
-------------------------------------------
I need to cut the files into multiple files of 1000 records and should have the same header and trailer as the original files.
... (4 Replies)
I have a file
1
298167
298168
1093209
1093210
1422663
I want to write a code where in I want to read contents of above file
like first read is 1
second read is 298167
Substract second read from first and if this is greater than or less than 99,999.
Similarly I want to traverse thru... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Guru148
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
osacompile
OSACOMPILE(1) BSD General Commands Manual OSACOMPILE(1)NAME
osacompile -- compile AppleScripts and other OSA language scripts
SYNOPSIS
osacompile [-l language] [-e command] [-o name] [-d] [-r type:id] [-t type] [-c creator] [-x] [-s] [-u] [-a arch] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
osacompile compiles the given files, or standard input if none are listed, into a single output script. Files may be plain text or other
compiled scripts. The options are as follows:
-l language
Override the language for any plain text files. Normally, plain text files are compiled as AppleScript.
-e command
Enter one line of a script. Script commands given via -e are prepended to the normal source, if any. Multiple -e options may be given
to build up a multi-line script. Because most scripts use characters that are special to many shell programs (e.g., AppleScript uses
single and double quote marks, ``('', ``)'', and ``*''), the command will have to be correctly quoted and escaped to get it past the
shell intact.
-o name
Place the output in the file name. If -o is not specified, the resulting script is placed in the file ``a.scpt''. The value of -o
partly determines the output file format; see below.
-x Save the resulting script as execute-only.
The following options are only relevant when creating a new bundled applet or droplet:
-s Stay-open applet.
-u Use startup screen.
-a arch
Create the applet or droplet for the specified target architecture arch. The allowable values are ``ppc'', ``i386'', and ``x86_64''.
The default is to create a universal binary.
The following options control the packaging of the output file. You should only need them for compatibility with classic Mac OS or for cus-
tom file formats.
-d Place the resulting script in the data fork of the output file. This is the default.
-r type:id
Place the resulting script in the resource fork of the output file, in the specified resource.
-t type
Set the output file type to type, where type is a four-character code. If this option is not specified, the creator code will not be
set.
-c creator
Set the output file creator to creator, where creator is a four-character code. If this option is not specified, the creator code will
not be set.
If no options are specified, osacompile produces a Mac OS X format script file: data fork only, with no type or creator code.
If the -o option is specified and the file does not already exist, osacompile uses the filename extension to determine what type of file to
create. If the filename ends with ``.app'', it creates a bundled applet or droplet. If the filename ends with ``.scptd'', it creates a bun-
dled compiled script. Otherwise, it creates a flat file with the script data placed according to the values of the -d and -r options.
EXAMPLES
To produce a script compatible with classic Mac OS:
osacompile -r scpt:128 -t osas -c ToyS example.applescript
SEE ALSO osascript(1), osalang(1)Mac OS X November 12, 2008 Mac OS X