On 1/4/07, Jm lists <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
what's the encode format for "%BD%F1%C8%D5%C5%C5%D0%D0" ?Thank you.
It's another way for spammers to hide URLs, etc.
Try this:
use strict;
my $val = "%BD%F1%C8%D5%C5%C5%D0%D0";
print "Looking at $val ";
$val =~ s/%([0-9a-f][0-9a-f])/chr(hex($1))/
On 1/13/07, xavier mas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes, this is the code I use, but still doesn't work to me and I can't find the
cause.
Have you looked the results using Data::Dumper? Maybe the results
aren't as expected?
--
WC (Bill) Jones -- http://youve-reached-the.endoftheinternet.org/
h
Jeff Pang wrote:
>> If I have 'my $aryRef = [EMAIL PROTECTED]' can do 'push $aryRef, $aValue'?
>> Does this
>> place the value of $aValue directly into @array or do I need to figure out
>> another way to do that?
>>
>
> You can't do 'push' like this way since $aryRef is a scalar but 'push' expec
Jeff Pang wrote:
>> If I have 'my $aryRef = [EMAIL PROTECTED]' can do 'push $aryRef, $aValue'?
>> Does this
>> place the value of $aValue directly into @array or do I need to figure out
>> another way to do that?
>>
>
> You can't do 'push' like this way since $aryRef is a scalar but 'push' expec
>If I have 'my $aryRef = [EMAIL PROTECTED]' can do 'push $aryRef, $aValue'?
>Does this
>place the value of $aValue directly into @array or do I need to figure out
>another way to do that?
>
You can't do 'push' like this way since $aryRef is a scalar but 'push' expect a
list as its first argume
Quick question about references to arrays that I need clarified?
If I have 'my $aryRef = [EMAIL PROTECTED]' can do 'push $aryRef, $aValue'?
Does this
place the value of $aValue directly into @array or do I need to figure out
another way to do that?
I'm guessing this is exactly what array refere
A Dissabte 13 Gener 2007 20:38, John W. Krahn va escriure:
> xavier mas wrote:
> > Here's an example:
> > in (file, array and hash) contains: "woman, lion, ball"
> > img (file, array and hash) contains: "ball, dog, cat, lion".
> > dict (file, array and hash) contains: "house, man, woman, kid, kitch
On Jan 13, 2007, at 7:43 PM, xavier mas wrote:
Here's an example:
in (file, array and hash) contains: "woman, lion, ball"
img (file, array and hash) contains: "ball, dog, cat, lion".
dict (file, array and hash) contains: "house, man, woman, kid,
kitchen, lion"
Comparing in with dict ans img
xavier mas wrote:
>
> Here's an example:
> in (file, array and hash) contains: "woman, lion, ball"
> img (file, array and hash) contains: "ball, dog, cat, lion".
> dict (file, array and hash) contains: "house, man, woman, kid, kitchen, lion"
>
> Comparing in with dict ans img, I'll expect as a re
A Dissabte 13 Gener 2007 18:53, Xavier Noria va escriure:
> On Jan 13, 2007, at 6:29 PM, xavier mas wrote:
> > hello list,
> >
> > I am trying to find if an element in one primary file (transformed
> > to array)
> > is included in two other different secondary files (transformed to
> > arrays,
> >
On Jan 13, 2007, at 6:29 PM, xavier mas wrote:
hello list,
I am trying to find if an element in one primary file (transformed
to array)
is included in two other different secondary files (transformed to
arrays,
too); the result is going to be printed as 1 or 0:
According to the code that
hello list,
I am trying to find if an element in one primary file (transformed to array)
is included in two other different secondary files (transformed to arrays,
too); the result is going to be printed as 1 or 0:
...
#creating arrays from its text files
@img_array=; @dict_array=; @in_array=;
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