I downloaded the /examples in Net::Twitter, and they don't seem to
work. There were 2 in that directory. I've searched tons on Google,
and I've read both links on the dev.twitter.com site for perl, but
can't get those to work. Maybe someone here can help?
My Twitter code does only a few things:
On Dec 23, 2:31 am, rvtol+use...@isolution.nl (Dr.Ruud) wrote:
> sftriman wrote:
> > 1ST PLACE - THE WINNER: 5.0s average on 5 runs
>
> > # Limitation - pointer
> > sub fixsp5 {
> > ${$_[0]}=~tr/ \t\n\r\f/ /s;
> > ${$_[0]}=~s/\A //;
> > ${$_[0]}=~s/ \z//
Thanks to everyone for their input!
So I've tried out many of the methods, first making sure that each
works as I intended it.
Which is, I'm not concerned with multi-line text, just single line
data. That said, I have noted
that I should use \A and \z in general over ^ and $.
I wrote a 176 byte
I use this series of regexp all over the place to clean up lines of
text:
$x=~s/^\s+//g;
$x=~s/\s+$//g;
$x=~s/\s+/ /g;
in that order, and note the final one replace \s+ with a single space.
Basically, it's (1) remove all leading space, (2) remove all trailing
space,
and (3) replace all multi-spa
I've been wondering for a long time... is there a slick (and hopefully
fast!) way
to do this?
foreach (keys %fixhash) {
$x=~s/\b$_\b/$fixhash{$_}/gi;
}
So if
$x="this could be so cool"
and
$fixhash{"could"}="would";
$fixhash{"COOL"}="awesome";
$fixhash{"beso"}="nope";
$fixhash{"his"}="impo
On Nov 22, 6:16 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dermot) wrote:
> 2008/11/22 Sureshkumar M (HCL Financial Services) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
>
> > Hi All,
>
> Hi
>
>
>
> > #!/usr/bin/perl
>
> # Always use these, particularly when things aren't working as expected.
> use strict;
> use warnings;
>
> > open(DAT
I have this code that looks through a series of files, and for each,
counts
the unique number of IP addresses over the past 20 minutes, then
rewrites
the file contents.
It seems pretty simple - each of the 5 $site files has at most 100 or
so IP
entries it in - many files have 0-5 rows of data at a
I have data such as:
A|B|C|44
X|Y|Z|33,44
C|R|E|44,55,66
T|Q|I|88,33,44
I want to find all lines with 44 in the last field. I was trying:
/[,\|]44[,\$]/
which logically is perfect - but the end of line \$ doesn't seem
right.
How do I write:
comma or pipe followed by 44 followed by comma or e