That is the purpose of the IFS. You can directly process the file seperated by '^' so and not have to bother with having to use things like cut and awk.
Hi,
I have a while read loop that reads files in a directory and process. The files have spaces in between, so I have the IFS=\n to to read the whole line as one file name.
The read works fine but I have a problem with another variable that I set in the beginning of the script. The variable... (1 Reply)
Hi!
I am working in korn shell. I want to reset the dimiliter for the set command to "|" but instead of a command prompt return I am getting something as below
After issuing the command I am getting this....as if the shell is expecting something else. Can anybody suggest what's the problem.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have modified the IFS variable in the K shell program and with in the program i want to reset to the default one. How do i reset the same.
e.g
in the begining of the program IFS is default
in the middle i changed it to
IFS="|"
and again i want the default value for the IFS.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
while ; do
echo "Please enter "
read enter
yyyy=${enter:0:4}
mm=${enter:5:2}
dd=${enter:8:2}
result=`validateDate $yyyy $mm $dd`
When does the loop keeping repeating till?? till 1 is equal to 1?
what does this mean "${enter:0:4}" .The 0 and 4 part??
... (3 Replies)
I am using bash and resetting IFS as below when reading the command line arguments. I do this so I can call my script as in Ex1.
Ex1: ./synt2d-ray3dmod.bash --xsrc=12/20/30
This allows me to split both sides so that when I do "shift"
I can get 12/20/30
What I do not understand is... (21 Replies)
Hello masters of scripting,
I've been working to develop some basic monitoring scripts. I have solved one problem, but want to know how to solve the other.
I have a script that runs locally to create an output file with the Linux system kernel paramters, preceeded by the system name:
... (2 Replies)
Ok, so I'm playing around with delimters and reading files. and I came across this behaviour that I thought was a bit odd, regarding how the set command takes values... If I run this: IFS=$'-' #Assigns the - as the default delimiter for bash set I-love-my-gf-a-lot #uses set to put a bunch of... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Lost in Cyberia
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
phones
phones(4) File Formats phones(4)NAME
phones - remote host phone number database
SYNOPSIS
/etc/phones
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/phones contains the system-wide private phone numbers for the tip(1) program. /etc/phones is normally unreadable, and so may
contain privileged information. The format of /etc/phones is a series of lines of the form:
<system-name>[ ]*<phone-number>.
The system name is one of those defined in the remote(4) file and the phone number is constructed from [0123456789-=*%]. The `=' and `*'
characters are indicators to the auto call units to pause and wait for a second dial tone (when going through an exchange). The `=' is
required by the DF02-AC and the `*' is required by the BIZCOMP 1030.
Comment lines are lines containing a `#' sign in the first column of the line.
Only one phone number per line is permitted. However, if more than one line in the file contains the same system name tip(1) will attempt
to dial each one in turn, until it establishes a connection.
FILES
/etc/phones
SEE ALSO tip(1), remote(4)SunOS 5.10 14 Jan 1992 phones(4)