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Full Discussion: Index Command
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Index Command Post 56650 by S.P.Prasad on Thursday 7th of October 2004 09:11:25 AM
Old 10-07-2004
I would like to give a try.

The awk utility searches for string pattern /CLIENT=/ from file name being passed as second parameter to itself having field separator set as '=' and executes an action of assigning the len variable with the position of first occurrence of value held by variable CLIENT if defined in string provided as file name, the output being stored in a shell variable RESULT.


Hope this helps.
 

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TM::Index::Match(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     TM::Index::Match(3pm)

NAME
TM::Index::Match - Topic Maps, Indexing support (match layer) SYNOPSIS
# somehow get a map (any subclass of TM will do) my $tm = ... # one option: create a lazy index which learns as you go use TM::Index::Match; my $idx = new TM::Index::Match ($tm); # for most operations which involve match_forall to be called # reading and querying the map should be much faster # learn about some statistics, what keys are most likely to be useful my @optimized_keys = @{ $stats->{proposed_keys} }; # another option: create an eager index my $idx = new TM::Index::Match ($tm, closed => 1); # pre-populate it, use the proposed keys $idx->populate (@optimized_keys); # this may be a lengthy operation if the map is big # but then the index is 'complete' # query map now, should also be faster # getting rid of an index explicitly $idx->detach; # cleaning an index $idx->discard; DESCRIPTION
This index implements a generic query cache which can capture all queries not handled by more specific indices. This class inherits directly from TM::Index. INTERFACE
Constructor The constructor/destructors are the same as that described in TM::Index. Methods populate $idx->populate (@list_of_keys) To populate the index with canned results this method can be invoked. At this stage it is not very clever and may take quite some time to work its way through a larger map. This is most likely something to be done in the background. The list of keys to be passed in is a bit black magic. Your current best bet is to look at the index statistics method, and retrieve a proposed list from there: @optimized_keys = @{ $stats->{proposed_keys} }; $idx->populate (@optimized_keys[0..2]); # only take the first few If this list is empty, nothing clever will happen. statistics $hashref = $idx->statistics This returns a hash containing statistical information about certain keys, how much data is behind them, how often they are used when adding information to the index, how often data is read out successfully. The "cost" component can give you an estimated about the cost/benefit. SEE ALSO
TM, TM::Index COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 200[6] by Robert Barta, <drrho@cpan.org> This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2008-04-10 TM::Index::Match(3pm)
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