I have a dropdown menu built in perl tk (I am using active state perl). I want to select a value from the dropdown menu and I want to be able to perform some other actions depending upon what value is selected. I have all the graphical part made but I dont know how to get the selected value. Any... (0 Replies)
Requirement is:
1. comment and uncomment the line with Shell
Script: /opt/admin/fastpg/bin/fastpg.exe -c -=NET (using fastpg.exe as a search option)
2. display = "Commented" (when its commented) and display = "Uncommented" (when its uncommented)
Its urgent, please let me asap!!!
Thanks in... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I've a list in the following format:
Empdept filedetails buildingNo Area
AAA 444 2 juy
AAA 544 2 kui
AAA 567 4 poi
AAA 734 5 oiu
AAA 444 ... (2 Replies)
I have a combo.cgi here. this is linux environment
What i am going to do is this combobox will list down all the flatfile name in this /u/test/cgi-bin/List directory.
after that, i wanted it to open the flatfile and display the content of the flatfile into another listbox or textarea in this page... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have the following lines that I would like to see in an array for easy comparisons and printing:
Example 1:
field1,field2,field3,field4,field5
value1,value2,value3,value4,value5Example 2:
field1,field3,field4,field2,field5,field6,field7... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
Need a small help in writing a shell script which can delete a few lines from a file which is currently being used by another process.
File gets appended using tee -a command due to which its size is getting increased.
Contents like :
25/09/2012 05:18 Run ID:56579677-1
My... (3 Replies)
cd path
line1
line2
line3
line4
line5
Lets say thats the sample script...So say if i have to comment the above script, which would be the better way so that whenever i want, i cud comment or uncomment the same.
Thanks (1 Reply)
I have one master file "File1" with all such info in it. I need to grep each object under each list from another file "File2". Can anyone help me with a script for this.
File 1
------
List 1
Object 1
Object 2
List 2
Object 3
Object 1
List 3
Object 2
... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I have some tab delimited text data,
file: final_temp1
aname val
NAME;r'(1,) 3.28584
r'(2,)<tab>
NAME;r'(3,) 6.13003
NAME;r'(4,) 4.18037
r'(5,)<tab>
You can see that the data is incomplete in some cases. There is a trailing tab after the first column for each incomplete row. I... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I need to collect some statistical results from a series of files that are being generated by other software. The files are tab delimited. There are 4 different sets of statistics in each file where there is a line indicating what the statistic set is, followed by 5 lines of values. It... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: LMHmedchem
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
nmedit
NMEDIT(1) General Commands Manual NMEDIT(1)NAME
nmedit - change global symbols to local symbols
SYNOPSIS
nmedit -s list_file [-R list_file] [-p] [-A] [-] [[-arch arch_type] ...] object_file ... [-o output]
DESCRIPTION
Nmedit changes the global symbols not listed in the list_file file of the -s list_file option to static symbols. Undefined symbols and
common symbols are not affected and shouldn't be listed in list_file. For dynamic libraries symbols are turned into private extern symbols
that are no longer external (rather than static symbols). This is done so that the references between modules of a dynamic library are
resolved to the symbols in the dynamic library. Nmedit differs from strip(1) in that it also changes the symbolic debugging information
(produce by the -g option to cc(1)) for the global symbols it changes to static symbols so that the resulting object can still be used with
the debugger.
Nmedit like strip(1) is useful to limit the symbols for use with later linking. This allows control of the interface that the executable
wants to provide to the objects that it will dynamically load, and it will not have to publish symbols that are not part of its interface.
For example an executable that wishes to allow only a subset of its global symbols but all of the shared libraries globals to be used would
have its symbol table edited with:
% nmedit -s interface_symbols -A executable
where the file interface_symbols would contain only those symbols from the executable that it wishes the objects loaded at runtime to have
access to. Another example is an object that is made up of a number of other objects that will be loaded into an executable would built
and then have its symbol table edited with:
% ld -o relocatable.o -r a.o b.o c.o
% nmedit -s interface_symbols relocatable.o
which would leave only the symbols listed in the file interface_symbols (and the undefined and common symbols) as global symbols in the
object file.
The one or more of the following options is required to nmedit(1) is:
-s filename
Leave the symbol table entries for the global symbols listed in filename global but turn all other global symbols (except undefined
and common symbols) into static symbols. The symbol names listed in filename must be one per line. Leading and trailing white space
are not part of the symbol name. Lines starting with # are ignored, as are lines with only white space.
-R filename
Change the symbol table entries for the global symbols listed in filename into static symbols. This file has the same format as the
-s filename option above. If the -R filename option is specified without the -s filename option, then all symbols not listed in the
-R filename option's filename are left as globals. If both a -R filename and a -s filename are given the symbols listed in the -R
filename are basically ignored and only those symbols listed in the -s filename are saved.
-p Change symbols to private externs instead of static. This is allowed as the only option to change all defined global symbols to
private externs.
The options to nmedit(1) are:
-A Leave all global absolute symbols except those with a value of zero, and save objective-C class symbols as globals. This is
intended for use of programs that load code at runtime and want the loaded code to use symbols from the shared libraries.
- Treat all remaining arguments as file names and not options.
-arch arch_type
Specifies the architecture, arch_type, of the file for nmedit(1) to process when the file is a universal file (see arch(3) for the
currently know arch_types). The arch_type can be all to process all architectures in the file. The default is to process all
architectures that are contained in the file.
-o output
Write the result into the file output.
SEE ALSO strip(1), ld(1), arch(3)BUGS
The changing of the symbolic debugging information by nmedit is not known to be totally correct and could cause the debugger to crash, get
confused or produce incorrect information.
Apple Inc. May 29, 2007 NMEDIT(1)