Wed, 14 May 2008 08:00:00 GMT Soothsayer is a predictive text input system. Many folks reading that sentence will think of the word completion offered by mobile phones. Soothsayer is different from such mobile phone systems in that it tries to use context and other statistical information to offer predictions instead of just presenting a list of words that might match the first few letters you type.
Hi dears
i use bash shell
i have INPUT.txt
like this
number of columns different in one
some row have 12 , some 11 columns
see last column
INPUT.txt
CodeGender Age Grade Dialect Session Sentence Start End Length Phonemic Phonetic
63 M 27 BS/BA TEHRANI 3 4 298320 310050... (2 Replies)
I need to search a string for some specific text which is no big deal using grep. My problem is when the search fails to find the text. I need to add text like "na" when my search does not match.
I have tried this command but it does not work when I put the command in a loop in a bash script:
... (12 Replies)
We are getting the following diagela error messages every half hour from our P6 P520 AIX server after incorrectly accidentally configuring both HMC ports on the FSP with the same IP address a month ago:
B1A38B24: External environment Predictive Error, general. Refer to the
system... (0 Replies)
DEMANDOC(1) BSD General Commands Manual DEMANDOC(1)NAME
demandoc -- emit only text of UNIX manuals
SYNOPSIS
demandoc [-w] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The demandoc utility emits only the text portions of well-formed mdoc(7) and man(7) UNIX manual files.
By default, demandoc parses standard input and outputs only text nodes, preserving line and column position. Escape sequences are omitted
from the output.
Its arguments are as follows:
-w Output a word list. This outputs each word of text on its own line. A "word", in this case, refers to whitespace-delimited terms
beginning with at least two letters and not consisting of any escape sequences. Words have their leading and trailing punctuation
(double-quotes, sentence punctuation, etc.) stripped.
file ...
The input files.
If a document is not well-formed, it is skipped.
The -i, -k, -m, and -p flags are silently discarded for calling compatibility with the historical deroff.
EXIT STATUS
The demandoc utility exits with one of the following values:
0 No errors occurred.
6 An operating system error occurred, for example memory exhaustion or an error accessing input files. Such errors cause demandoc to
exit at once, possibly in the middle of parsing or formatting a file. The output databases are corrupt and should be removed .
EXAMPLES
The traditional usage of demandoc is for spell-checking manuals on BSD. This is accomplished as follows (assuming British spelling):
$ demandoc -w file.1 | spell -b
SEE ALSO mandoc(1), man(7), mdoc(7)HISTORY
demandoc replaces the historical deroff utility for handling modern man(7) and mdoc(7) documents.
AUTHORS
The demandoc utility was written by Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@bsd.lv>.
BSD September 12, 2014 BSD