I made a program that extracts quotes while retaining special inner quotes (in this case an 'x' followed by an apostrophe). The original program is far more complicated than this, but I wanted to make it simple to troubleshoot.
I want to take these two perl commands and have the first command's results be piped into the second commands input but while only running perl once:
Input: ['Say, x'Hix'']
Output: Say, x'Hix'
Taking the output of the first command:
Result (proper): Say, 'Hi'
I realise that I could easily just run perl twice and pipe them into eachother, but running perl twice seems inefficient; especially given that this command is ran thousands of times:
I've tried combining both commands in the code below, but it doesn't seem to be taking the output of the first command as input for the second:
Result (not what I want):
What is the correct format for a single command that would combine portions of 2 different lines in the command history? I'm using a C shell. Here's a simplified command history to clarify:
4 rm file1
5 ls -ld file2 file3 file4
6 cat file 5
With the above history, what would be the... (5 Replies)
I would like to change the lines:
originalline1
originalline2
to:
originalline1new
originalline1newline
originalline2new
originalline2newline
To do this, id like to combine the commands:
sed 's/^/&new/g' file > newfile1
and
sed '/^/ a\\
newline\\
\\ (2 Replies)
Hello all,
I am trying to list and count all the files of a particular type in any given directory. I can use the commands separately but when I combine them they do not give an output.
The command for counting the files is ls -1 | wc -l and for listing all the file of particular type say... (2 Replies)
Is there anyway to achieve "find /home -name "*.bashrc" 2>/dev/null" and "PS1="\n>"" in the same command? I just wanna add a line to the previous command to change the PS1 variable to ">". (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I am looking to optimze these 5 SSH lines to a single SSH to get my machine to not hang! lol!
cat hosts.lst | xargs -n1 -t -i echo 'home/util/timeout 6 0 ssh -q {} top -b > util/{}.top &' >> r_query_info
cat hosts.lst | xargs -n1 -t -i echo 'home/util/timeout 6 0 ssh -q {} uname -r... (5 Replies)
hey can anyone tell me how can i combine these two commands so that it is executed only once, but gives me both the results.
IDLE=`sar 30 6 | grep Average | awk '{print $1 $5}' `
sar 30 120 | awk '{print $1" "$5}' >> mailx -m -s "$MSG" xyz@abc.com. (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a directory with some XML files in it. I can use wildcards to get the list of XMLs I want
say I have following XMLs in same dir
Employee1.xml
Employee2.xml
Employee3.xml
and
Salary1.xml
Salary2.xml
Salary3.xml
apart from other .txt .dat files etc
I want to write a unix... (7 Replies)
I have a directory of 3000 files without extensions (Solaris 5.10).
I would like to iterate the file names through the 'file' command and output their mime types (most are pdf or jpg, but a very few might be psd or swf which show simply as 'data')
So, I would like the output of the 'ls'... (2 Replies)
Hello all,
I need to send an attachment and text in the body, both in the same Email.
Below are two cammand that send the required data in separate Emails. I need to combine them so that I get just 1 Email containing the attachment & text in the body.
uuencode ${filename} "${file_}" |... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Junaid Subhani
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xpacmdnew
xpacmdnew(3) SAORD Documentation xpacmdnew(3)NAME
XPACmdNew - create a new XPA public access point for commands
SYNOPSIS
#include <xpa.h>
XPA XPACmdNew(char *class, char *name);
DESCRIPTION
Create a new XPA public access point for commands that will share a common identifier class:name. Enter this access point into the XPA name
server, so that it can be accessed by external processes. XPACmdNew() returns an XPA struct.
It often is more convenient to have one public access point that can manage a number of commands, rather than having individual access
points for each command. For example, it is easier to command the ds9 image display using:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset ds9
echo "scale log" | xpaset ds9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset ds9
then to use:
echo "I8" | xpaset ds9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset ds9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset ds9_file
In the first case, the commands remain the same regardless of the target XPA name. In the second case, the command names must change for
each instance of ds9. That is, if a second instance of ds9 called DS9 were running, it would be commanded either as:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset DS9
echo "scale log" | xpaset DS9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset DS9
or as:
echo "I8" | xpaset DS9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset DS9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset DS9_file
Thus, in cases where a program is going to manage many commands, it generally is easier to define them as commands associated with the
XPACmdNew() routine, rather than as separate access points using XPANew().
When XPACmdNew() is called, only the class:name identifier is specified. Each sub-command is subsequently defined using the XPACmdAdd()
routine.
SEE ALSO
See xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages
version 2.1.14 June 7, 2012 xpacmdnew(3)