Hi Dan,
I did as you suggested.
print "<a href=\"http://www.cnn.com\";>Click here</a>"; 
I don't get any compilation error, email goes fine to my groupwise
mailbox. When I open hte mail, I see the raw html. 
<a href=http://www.cnn.com>Click here</a
But I wanted only the "Click here" to be in the mail instead of the
link. 
>>> "Dan Muey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 01/24/03 01:26PM >>>

> 
> Hello folks,
> I am having a problem of embedding the html tag 
> <a href=http://www.cnn.com >Click here</a> in a perl script. 
> Could someone please help .

Always change the subject when you're doinhg a new post.

What problem are you having?
First off make the thml correct:
<a href="http://www.cnn.com";>Click here</a>
Second :

print '<a href="http://www.cnn.com";>Click here</a>'; # with single
quotes
print "<a href=\"http://www.cnn.com\";>Click here</a>"; # with double
quotes
Notice the backslashes in front of the double quotes in the double
quoted string
That escapes them, or treats them as literl " instead of seeing them as
how perl is using them for a print statement

EG doing this :
print "<a href="http://www.cnn.com";>Click here</a>";
Is just the same as doing :


print "<a href="
http://www.cnn.com 
">Click here</a>";

Firstline is missing an ending ';'
Second line is a bareword
Third line has nothing to tell it what todo with the "" string


> 
> Thanks.
> Deepa
> 
> >>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 01/24/03 01:01PM >>>
> 
> >I have a list of inspection stations in a data file which is 
> >comma-separated. It contains the following data, in order: Station 
> >Name, Address 1, Address Line 2, City, State, Zip, Phone
> Number
> >
> >I need to group the lines (of address information) by city and get
a
> count
> 
> >of the number of stations in a given city.
> 
> OK, I didn't actually test this exact code, but it should 
> present the idea of storing this information in an array of arrays:
> 
>       open IN, yourfile;
>       while (<IN>){
>             chomp;
>             push @arr, \[split /,/];
>       }
>       close IN;
>       @arr = sort ${$arr[$a]}[3] <=> ${$arr[$b]}[3] @arr;   # sort
by
> city
> 
> How do you picture using a hash of hashes of arrays?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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