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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? FYI: Stack Overflow... seems there's quite a revolt of sorts going on over there and everywhere. Post 303044477 by Neo on Monday 24th of February 2020 02:02:48 AM
Old 02-24-2020
Quote:
Originally Posted by nezabudka
Thanks so much for your clarification.
Welcome.

It is certainly subject matter everyone should be familiar with.

How people act on this information and the knowledge of the rise and dominance of surveillance capitalism is, well.. it is "up to each individual and organization".

The current issue is that surveillance capitalism has become so profitable, that most information-based tech companies depend of surveillance capitalism to survive in a very competitive market place.

That's the problem.... all the "huge, great, free services" people (and businesses) are dependent on (the ones which are very profitable, at least) have built their business model on surveillance capitalism.

It's not so complex really. It is simply the new, dominate form of capitalism in the age of social-media. However, the question becomes "what are we, the people, going to do about it?"
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TABLIFY(1p)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					       TABLIFY(1p)

NAME
tablify - turn a delimited text file into a text table SYNOPSIS
tablify [options] file Options: -h|--help Show help --no-headers Assume first line is data, not headers --no-pager Do not use $ENV{'PAGER'} even if defined --strip-quotes Strip " or ' around fields -l|--list List the fields in the file (for use with -f) -f|--fields=f1[,f2] Show only fields in comma-separated list; when used in conjunction with "no-headers" the list should be field numbers (starting at 1); otherwise, should be field names -w|where=f<cmp>v Apply the "cmp" Perl operator to restrict output where field "f" matches the value "v"; acceptable operators include ==, eq, >, >=, <=, and =~ -v|--vertical Show records vertically --limit=n Limit to first "n" records --fs=x Use "x" as the field separator (default is tab " ") --rs=x Use "x" as the record separator (default is newline " ") --as-html Create an HTML table instead of plain text DESCRIPTION
This script is essentially a quick way to parse a delimited text file and view it as a nice ASCII table. By selecting only certain fields, employing a where clause to only select records where a field matches some value, and using the limit to only see some of the output, you almost have a mini-database front-end for a simple text file. EXAMPLES
Given a data file like this: name,rank,serial_no,is_living,age George,General,190293,0,64 Dwight,General,908348,0,75 Attila,Hun,,0,56 Tojo,Emporor,,0,87 Tommy,General,998110,1,54 To find the fields you can reference, use the list option: $ tablify --fs ',' -l people.dat +-----------+-----------+ | Field No. | Field | +-----------+-----------+ | 1 | name | | 2 | rank | | 3 | serial_no | | 4 | is_living | | 5 | age | +-----------+-----------+ To extract just the name and serial numbers, use the fields option: $ tablify --fs ',' -f name,serial_no people.dat +--------+-----------+ | name | serial_no | +--------+-----------+ | George | 190293 | | Dwight | 908348 | | Attila | | | Tojo | | | Tommy | 998110 | +--------+-----------+ 5 records returned To extract the first through third fields and the fifth field (where field numbers start at "1" -- tip: use the list option to quickly determine field numbers), use this syntax for fields: $ tablify --fs ',' -f 1-3,5 people.dat +--------+---------+-----------+------+ | name | rank | serial_no | age | +--------+---------+-----------+------+ | George | General | 190293 | 64 | | Dwight | General | 908348 | 75 | | Attila | Hun | | 56 | | Tojo | Emporor | | 87 | | Tommy | General | 998110 | 54 | +--------+---------+-----------+------+ 5 records returned To select only the ones with six serial numbers, use a where clause: $ tablify --fs ',' -w 'serial_no=~/^d{6}$/' people.dat +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ | name | rank | serial_no | is_living | age | +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ | George | General | 190293 | 0 | 64 | | Dwight | General | 908348 | 0 | 75 | | Tommy | General | 998110 | 1 | 54 | +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ 3 records returned To find Dwight's record, you would do this: $ tablify --fs ',' -w 'name eq "Dwight"' people.dat +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ | name | rank | serial_no | is_living | age | +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ | Dwight | General | 908348 | 0 | 75 | +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+------+ 1 record returned To find the name of all the people with a serial number who are living: $ tablify --fs ',' -f name -w 'is_living==1' -w 'serial_no>0' people.dat +-------+ | name | +-------+ | Tommy | +-------+ 1 record returned To filter outside of program and simply format the results, use "-" as the last argument to force reading of STDIN (and probably assume no headers): $ grep General people.dat | tablify --fs ',' -f 1-3 --no-headers - +---------+--------+--------+ | Field1 | Field2 | Field3 | +---------+--------+--------+ | General | 190293 | 0 | | General | 908348 | 0 | | General | 998110 | 1 | +---------+--------+--------+ 3 records returned When dealing with data lacking field names, you can specify "no-headers" and then refer to fields by number (starting at one), e.g.: $ tail -5 people.dat | tablify --fs ',' --no-headers -w '3 eq "General"' - +--------+---------+--------+--------+--------+ | Field1 | Field2 | Field3 | Field4 | Field5 | +--------+---------+--------+--------+--------+ | George | General | 190293 | 0 | 64 | | Dwight | General | 908348 | 0 | 75 | | Tommy | General | 998110 | 1 | 54 | +--------+---------+--------+--------+--------+ 3 records returned If your file has many fields which are hard to see across the screen, consider using the vertical display with "-v" or "--vertical", e.g.: $ tablify --fs ',' -v --limit 1 people.dat ************ Record 1 ************ name: George rank: General serial_no: 190293 is_living: 0 age : 64 1 record returned SEE ALSO
o Text::RecordParser o Text::TabularDisplay o DBD::CSV Although I don't DBD::CSV this module, the idea was much the inspiration for this. I just didn't want to have to install DBI and DBD::CSV to get this kind of functionality. I think my interface is simpler. AUTHOR
Ken Youens-Clark <kclark@cpan.org>. LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2006-10 Ken Youens-Clark. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. perl v5.10.1 2010-07-26 TABLIFY(1p)
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