On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Sharan Basappa
wrote:
> Hi Alan,
>
> I am not resisting installing but I am having trouble installing
> Text::CSV module.
>
> I would be glad if someone helps with these errors ...
Hi Sharan,
You might find it a lot easier to install things if you use standard
to
On Friday 02 Jul 2010 12:59:54 Sharan Basappa wrote:
> Thanks a lot. I am now installing the module to try out and start
> implementing my own code.
> I think I will need help in installing the module ...
>
> This goes through fine:
> perl Makefile.PL
> Checking if your kit is complete...
> Looks
On 2 July 2010 15:56, Sharan Basappa wrote:
> Hi Jason,
>
> Does CSV module come prebuilt so that I can avoid installing.
> I dont know SQL but my requirements are very modest.
> Extract lines and get filed and reformat them to another type.
>
> Regads,
> Sharan
Hi Sharan,
DBD::CSV is not in co
Hi Alan,
I am not resisting installing but I am having trouble installing
Text::CSV module.
I would be glad if someone helps with these errors ...
perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=/home/sharan/tools/perl-install
Checking if your kit is complete...
Looks good
Writing Makefile for Text::CSV_XS
Make fails
SQL, I'd suggest you using DBI and DBD::CSV.
>
> Cheers,
> Jason
>
>> Date: Fri, 2 Jul 2010 18:47:22 +1000
>> Subject: Re: parsing csv
>> From: rc...@pcug.org.au
>> To: sharan.basa...@gmail.com
>> CC: beginners@perl.org
>>
>>
>> &g
Hi there,
If you know some SQL, I'd suggest you using DBI and DBD::CSV.
Cheers,
Jason
> Date: Fri, 2 Jul 2010 18:47:22 +1000
> Subject: Re: parsing csv
> From: rc...@pcug.org.au
> To: sharan.basa...@gmail.com
> CC: beginners@perl.org
>
>
> > Folks,
> &
Thanks a lot. I am now installing the module to try out and start
implementing my own code.
I think I will need help in installing the module ...
This goes through fine:
perl Makefile.PL
Checking if your kit is complete...
Looks good
Writing Makefile for Text::CSV_XS
Make fails:
make
cp CSV_XS.pm
On Friday 02 Jul 2010 11:55:47 Sharan Basappa wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 2:19 PM, Shlomi Fish wrote:
> > On Friday 02 Jul 2010 11:40:05 Sharan Basappa wrote:
> >> Folks,
> >>
> >> I have to parse a csv file and convert it into some other format.
> >> Can someone tell me what support perl has
On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 2:19 PM, Shlomi Fish wrote:
> On Friday 02 Jul 2010 11:40:05 Sharan Basappa wrote:
>> Folks,
>>
>> I have to parse a csv file and convert it into some other format.
>> Can someone tell me what support perl has for csv parsing.
>> My requirements are very modest, so somethng
On Friday 02 Jul 2010 11:40:05 Sharan Basappa wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I have to parse a csv file and convert it into some other format.
> Can someone tell me what support perl has for csv parsing.
> My requirements are very modest, so somethng simple would be preferable.
>
See the page I prepared ab
> Folks,
>
> I have to parse a csv file and convert it into some other format.
> Can someone tell me what support perl has for csv parsing.
> My requirements are very modest, so somethng simple would be
> preferable.
>
> Regards,
> Sharan
You might want to search http://search.cpan.org/search?
On 2 Jul 2010, at 09:40, Sharan Basappa wrote:
> I have to parse a csv file and convert it into some other format.
> Can someone tell me what support perl has for csv parsing.
> My requirements are very modest, so somethng simple would be preferable.
There is a module on CPAN for this. Using it
From: David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> However, it doesn't answer the root question, namely how to parse text
> that contains Western European characters such as accents and umlauts.
>
> I see from the Text::CSV documentation that this module handles only
> characters between 0x20 and 0x7e. I
David Newman wrote:
On 3/20/08 5:05 PM, Gunnar Hjalmarsson wrote:
David Newman wrote:
I have some CSV input files that contain control and extended ASCII
characters,
The Text::CSV or Tie::Handle::CSV modules don't like these
characters; the snippets below both return errors when they get t
On 3/20/08 5:05 PM, Gunnar Hjalmarsson wrote:
David Newman wrote:
I have some CSV input files that contain control and extended ASCII
characters,
The Text::CSV or Tie::Handle::CSV modules don't like these characters;
the snippets below both return errors when they get to one.
my $csv =
David Newman wrote:
I have some CSV input files that contain control and extended ASCII
characters,
The Text::CSV or Tie::Handle::CSV modules don't like these characters;
the snippets below both return errors when they get to one.
my $csv = Text::CSV->new();
In the docs for Text::CSV,
On 9/19/07, Ruprecht Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chas Owens wrote:
> > On 9/19/07, Ruprecht Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> #!/usr/bin/perl
> >
> > First off, you should use the strict and warnings pragmas. So the
> > first two lines after the $! should be
> >
> > use strict;
> > use
Chas Owens wrote:
> On 9/19/07, Ruprecht Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> #!/usr/bin/perl
>
> First off, you should use the strict and warnings pragmas. So the
> first two lines after the $! should be
>
> use strict;
> use warnings;
...
I inserted the two commands and get now these errors.
On 9/19/07, Ruprecht Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> #!/usr/bin/perl
First off, you should use the strict and warnings pragmas. So the
first two lines after the $! should be
use strict;
use warnings;
>
> open(CSV,"Kalkulation_Tauchsportportal.csv") || die "CSV-Datei nicht
> gefunden";
>
> $
Andrew Curry wrote:
> open(CSV,"Kalkulation_Tauchsportportal.csv") || die "CSV-Datei nicht
> gefunden\"; you have \ your "
Ok I corrected it, now I only have an syntax-error in line 25
(split-command). In addition i am told that the part is not terminated.
The actual code is:
#!/usr/bin/perl
@Datenfelder = split(/,,,$Felder);
Guessing this line.
Split (//,$string)
-Original Message-
From: Ruprecht Helms [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 19 September 2007 15:00
To: Andrew Curry
Cc: Chas Owens; Jonathan Lang; beginners@perl.org
Subject: Re: parsing csv-file for inserting in
open(CSV,"Kalkulation_Tauchsportportal.csv") || die "CSV-Datei nicht
gefunden\"; you have \ your "
-Original Message-
From: Ruprecht Helms [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 19 September 2007 10:40
To: Chas Owens
Cc: Jonathan Lang; beginners@perl.org
Subject:
Hi,
On running the script I get the following errors:
Scalar found where operator expected at ./csv_auslesen.pl line 29, near
"pint Auftrag "$Datenfelder"
(Might be a runaway multi-line "" string starting on line 3)
(Do you need to predeclare pint?)
Backslash found where operator expect
On Mon, 2007-09-17 at 13:34 -0700, Jonathan Lang wrote:
> Most of the replies have suggested using 'split( /\|/, $line )'.
> However, this ignores a potentially important aspect of common cvs
> file formats - well, important to me, anyway - which is the
> interaction between quotes, field delimite
On 9/17/07, Jonathan Lang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
snip
> Most of the replies have suggested using 'split( /\|/, $line )'.
> However, this ignores a potentially important aspect of common cvs
> file formats - well, important to me, anyway - which is the
> interaction between quotes, field delimit
Ruprecht Helms wrote:
> Hi,
>
> how can I parse a csv-file where the entries are seperated with | .
> The scripts later should put them into a mysql-database using dbi.
>
> Especially for me is interessting how to parse the content of the file
> and store them into different variables for later pr
On 9/16/07, Ruprecht Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> how can I parse a csv-file where the entries are seperated with | .
> The scripts later should put them into a mysql-database using dbi.
>
> Especially for me is interessting how to parse the content of the file
> and store them into
Hi Ken,
>> how can I parse a csv-file where the entries are seperated with | .
>> The scripts later should put them into a mysql-database using dbi.
>
> if it just splitting:
>
> @data = split( /\|/, $line );
I see you are working with array. The using of the for each-loop must be
possible
On Sun, 2007-09-16 at 12:28 +0200, Ruprecht Helms wrote:
> Hi,
>
> how can I parse a csv-file where the entries are seperated with | .
> The scripts later should put them into a mysql-database using dbi.
if it just splitting:
@data = split( /\|/, $line );
If you forget the backslash it wil
"Dave Sparrow" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Take a look at Text::CSV or Text::CSV_XS
> Ah, but here's the kicker...
> Most people who I will give this script to will be running Perl 5.6 and
WILL
> NOT have the ability to use any external modules, even those such
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dave Sparrow
wrote:
>> Take a look at Text::CSV or Text::CSV_XS
> Ah, but here's the kicker...
> Most people who I will give this script to will be running Perl 5.6 and
> WILL NOT have the ability to use any external modules, even those such as
> 'use strict' !
> T
> Take a look at Text::CSV or Text::CSV_XS
Ah, but here's the kicker...
Most people who I will give this script to will be running Perl 5.6 and WILL
NOT have the ability to use any external modules, even those such as 'use
strict' !
This is because they will be running a cut-down version of Perl th
On Tue, 24 Jun 2003, Sparrow, Dave wrote:
> I'm reading an Excel .csv file.
> Fields are separated by commas.
> If a field contains a comma, the whole field is double-quoted (Excel does
> this by default).
> An example of an input line is as follows:
>
> field1,field2,"field3a, field3b, field3c
you can get modules from cpan.perl.org
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Confidential: This electronic message and all contents contain information
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Sparrow, Dave wrote:
I'm reading an Excel .csv file.
Fields are separated by commas.
If a field contains a comma, the whole field is double-quoted (Excel does
this by default).
An example of an input line is as follows:
field1,field2,"field3a, field3b, field3c",field4,"field5a, field5c",field6
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