10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Using grep I can easily use:
cvs log |grep -iB 10 -A 10 'date: 2013-10-30'
to display search results and 10 lines before and after. How can this be accompished using gawk? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
4 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Friends,
I have an input file like this
chr1 100 200
chr1 200 300
chr1 300 400
chr1 400 500
chr1 500 600
chr1 600 700
chr1 700 800
chr1 800 900
chr1 900 920
chr1 940 960
I would like to get the first line's second column and the fifth line's 3rd column as one single line. This... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
13 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have used gawk inside my script. But doesn't make log of that. So, what is the way to make logs of gawk block
Thanks for replying...:) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ezee
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I have a text file consisting of 4 columns. What I am trying to do is see whether column 2 repeats multiple times, and collapse those repeats into one row. For example, here is a snippet of the file I am trying to analyze:
1 Gamble_Win 14.282 0.502
1 Sure_Thing 14.858 0.174
1... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jahn
4 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
After windows died on my netbook I installed Lubuntu and discovered Gawk about a month ago. After using Excel for 10+ years I'm amazed how quick and easily Gawk can process data but I'm stuck with a little problem merging data from multiple lines.
I'm an SEO Consultant and provide... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jamesfirst
9 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
This should be very easy but I can't figure it out...
I have a file that looks like this:
@SRR057408.1 FW8Y5CK02R652T length=34
AGCAGTGGTATCAACGCAGAGTAAGCAGTGGTAT
+SRR057408.1 FW8Y5CK02R652T length=34
FIIHFF6666?=:88@@@BBD:::?@ABBAAA>8
@SRR057408.2 FW8Y5CK02TBMHV length=52... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kmkocot
1 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
sir... am having a data file of customer master., containing some important fields as a set one line after another.,
what i want is to have one set of these fields(rows) one after another in line.........then the second set... and so on... till the last set completed.
I WANT THE DATA... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: KANNI786
0 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
sir... am having a data file of customer master., containing some important fields as a set one line after another.,
what i want is to have one set of these fields(rows) one after another in line.........then the second set... and so on... till the last set completed.
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: KANNI786
0 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
My input has much more lines, but few of them are below
pin(IDF) {
direction : input;
drc_pinsigtype : signal;
pin(SELDIV6) {
direction : input;
drc_pinsigtype : ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nehashine
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am attempting to combine sections of log that should be one line but are spaced out over 10-30 lines due to how the software is outputting the info. (If I am making a newbie mistake I apologize)
Example of log I am working with:
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here
info.
Info.
Info.
……..... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: demanche
4 Replies
MboxParser::Mail::Body(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation MboxParser::Mail::Body(3pm)
NAME
Mail::MboxParser::Mail::Body - rudimentary mail-body object
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::MboxParser;
[...]
# $msg is a Mail::MboxParser::Mail
my $body = $msg->body(0);
# or preferably
my $body = $msg->body($msg->find_body);
for my $line ($body->signature) { print $line, "
" }
for my $url ($body->extract_urls(unique => 1)) {
print $url->{url}, "
";
print $url->{context}, "
";
}
DESCRIPTION
This class represents the body of an email-message. Since emails can have multiple MIME-parts and each of these parts has a body it is not
always easy to say which part actually holds the text of the message (if there is any at all). Mail::MboxParser::Mail::find_body will help
and suggest a part.
METHODS
as_string ([strip_sig => 1])
Returns the textual representation of the body as one string. Decoding takes place when the mailbox has been opened using the decode =>
'BODY' | 'ALL' option.
If 'strip_sig' is set to a true value, the signature is stripped from the string.
as_lines ([strip_sig => 1])
Sames as as_string() just that you get an array of lines with newlines attached to each line.
NOTE: When the body is actually some encoded binary data (most commonly such a body is base64-encoded), you can still use this method.
Then you wont really get proper lines. Instead you get chunks of binary data that you should concatenate as in
my $binary = join "", $body->as_lines;
If 'strip_sig' is set to a true value, the signature is stripped from the string.
signature
Returns the signature of a message as an array of lines. Trailing newlines are already removed.
$body->error returns a string if no signature has been found.
extract_urls
extract_urls (unique => 1)
Returns an array of hash-refs. Each hash-ref has two fields: 'url' and 'context' where context is the line in which the 'url' appeared.
When calling it like $mail->extract_urls(unique => 1), duplicate URLs will be filtered out regardless of the 'context'. That's useful
if you just want a list of all URLs that can be found in your mails.
$body->error() will return a string if no URLs could be found within the body.
quotes
Returns a hash-ref of array-refs where the hash-keys are the several levels of quotation. Each array-element contains the paragraphs of
this quotation-level as one string. Example:
my $quotes = $msg->body($msg->find_body)->quotes;
print $quotes->{1}->[0], "
";
print $quotes->{0}->[0], "
";
This should print the first paragraph of the mail-body that has been quoted once and below that the paragraph that supposedly is the
reply to this paragraph. Perhaps thus:
> I had been trying to work with the CGI module
> but I didn't yet fully understand it.
Ah, it is tricky. Have you read the CGI-FAQ that
comes with the module?
Mark that empty lines will not be ignored and are part of the lines contained in the array of $quotes->{0}.
So below is a little code-snippet that should, in most cases, restore the first 5 paragraphs (containing quote-level 0 and 1) of an
email:
for (0 .. 4) {
print $quotes->{0}->[$_];
print $quotes->{1}->[$_];
}
Since quotes() considers an empty line between two quotes paragraphs as a paragraph in $quotes->{0}, the paragraphs with one quote and
those with zero are balanced. That means:
scalar @{$quotes->{0}} - DIFF == scalar @{$quotes->{1}} where DIFF is element of {-1, 0, 1}.
Unfortunately, quotes() can up to now only deal with '>' as quotation-marks.
VERSION
This is version 0.55.
AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
Tassilo von Parseval <tassilo.von.parseval@rwth-aachen.de>
Copyright (c) 2001-2005 Tassilo von Parseval. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
perl v5.12.3 2005-12-08 MboxParser::Mail::Body(3pm)