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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I used the code given by cfajohnson on this forum to generate background colors for xterm.
Thanks cfajohnson... (sorry wasnt allowed to past the complete url)
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
My excuses for a Title which does not really describe what I need.
My OS is Windows Vista/Windows7
I have a large database of homographs with the following structure:
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An example will make this clear
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Hi,
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Hi,
I am trying to insert Inverted Commas around all the numeric values within a comma seperated string / variable.
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Whats the basic difference between double inverted comma and single inverted comma and no comma applied at all?
Eg1 if
Eg2 if
iEg3 f (1 Reply)
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I'm a new user to unix and I want to be able to pick and choose different xterm colors via 3rd botton menu. I'm currently pico'd into my .fvwm2rc file and this is what I have under my bottons:
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pbmclean(1) General Commands Manual pbmclean(1)
NAME
pbmclean - flip isolated pixels in portable bitmap
SYNOPSIS
pbmclean [-minneighbors=N] [-black|-white] [pbmfile]
You can use the minimum unique abbreviation of the options. You can use two hyphens instead of one. You can separate an option name from
its value with white space instead of an equals sign.
Before December 2001, pbmclean accepted -N instead of -minneighbors.
DESCRIPTION
pbmclean cleans up a PBM image of random specs. It reads a PBM image as input and outputs a PBM that is the same as the input except with
every pixel which has less than N identical neighbours inverted.
The default for N is 1 - only completely isolated pixels are flipped.
(A value of N greater than 8 generates a completely inverted image (but use pnminvert to do that) -- or a completely white or completely
black image with the -black or -white option).
pbmclean considers the area beyond the edges of the image to be white. (This matters when you consider pixels right on the edge of the
image).
You can use pbmclean to clean up "snow" on bitmap images.
OPTIONS
-black
-white Flip pixels of the specified color. By default, if you specify neither -black nor -white, pbmclean flips both black and white pix-
els which do not have sufficient identical neighbors. If you specify -black, pbmclean leaves the white pixels alone and just erases
isolated black pixels. Vice versa for -white. You may specify both -black and -white to get the same as the default behavior.
SEE ALSO
pbm(5)
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1990 by Angus Duggan Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer. Copyright (C) 2001 by Michael Sternberg.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, pro-
vided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in sup-
porting documentation. This software is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
18 Oct 2001 pbmclean(1)