Hello everyone:
When I am using a pattern match to find my wanted process, things like
this:
*
ps -ef | grep hald-runner
root 5006 5005 0 Mar04 ?00:00:00 hald-runner
kevin
2009/3/11 kevin liu :
> �...@array = qx{ps -ef | grep hald-runner};
> chomp @array;
> foreach ( @array ) {
> if (/grep hald-runner/) {
> next;
> }
> }
>
> Here my confusion comes: What the grep here will mean??
> Here "grep" is just a plain text or a verb w
Hi,
I created a small Class, initially with Moose. When I wanted an
instance of the class I would call `my $instance = new MyClass`;
I then removed Moose and went for a standard Perl 00 constructor:
sub new {
my $class = shift;
my $self = {};
$self->{config} = _get_config();
bless ($se
kevin liu wrote:
Hello everyone:
Hello,
When I am using a pattern match to find my wanted process, things like
this:
*
ps -ef | grep hald-runner
root 5006 5005 0 Mar04 ?00:00:00 hald-ru
Hi all,
In java , we have jpos framework for is8583 processing .
Does we have library for processing iso8583 in perl ?
Thanks a lot !
Regards,
Chung
You might take a look at PerlPOS -- http://www.perlpos.com/
OBG
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 3:36 AM, Chung vu wrote:
> Hi all,
> In java , we have jpos framework for is8583 processing .
> Does we have library for processing iso8583 in perl ?
> Thanks a lot !
> Regards,
> Chung
>
--
To unsubscribe
Hi,
On Mar 11, 1:16 am, nore...@gunnar.cc (Gunnar Hjalmarsson) wrote:
>
> I would do:
>
> if ( $a =~ /\.(?:html|jpg)$/i )
>
> Please readhttp://perldoc.perl.org/perlretut.htmland other appropriate
> docs.
Read the doc, but how to negate the "Non-capturing groupings" ?
use strict;
my $a = '
Dermot wrote:
I created a small Class, initially with Moose. When I wanted an
instance of the class I would call `my $instance = new MyClass`;
I then removed Moose and went for a standard Perl 00 constructor:
sub new {
my $class = shift;
my $self = {};
$self->{config} = _get_config();
2009/3/11 Dr.Ruud :
> Dermot wrote:
>
>> I created a small Class, initially with Moose. When I wanted an
>> instance of the class I would call `my $instance = new MyClass`;
>>
>> I then removed Moose and went for a standard Perl 00 constructor:
>>
>> sub new {
>> my $class = shift;
>> my $self
kevin,
To answer your question, the 'greb' in your code is just part of a
string, it won't produce any effect.
and if what you wish is to remove your own grep process, this command
might do the trick.
ps -ef | grep hald-runner | grep -v grep
Tor.
kevin liu wrote:
Hello everyone:
When
Thanks Bob ,
Do you know any solution concerned with library that is parsed , analyzed
iso 8583 message
Regards,
Chung
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 5:46 PM, Bob goolsby wrote:
> You might take a look at PerlPOS -- http://www.perlpos.com/
>
>
> OBG
>
> On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 3:36 AM, Chung vu wrote
Hiya
I got a string like so, and for the likes of me I can get regex to have
it that each line is starts with #abc#.
my $a =
"#aaa#message:details;extra:info;variable:times;#bbb#message:details;extra:info;variable:times;#ccc#not:always;the:same;ts:14:00.00;";
$a =~ s/(?join( "\n", split(/#.*
On 3/10/09 Tue Mar 10, 2009 8:41 PM, "howa"
scribbled:
> Hi,
>
> On Mar 11, 1:16 am, nore...@gunnar.cc (Gunnar Hjalmarsson) wrote:
>>
>> I would do:
>>
>> if ( $a =~ /\.(?:html|jpg)$/i )
>>
>> Please readhttp://perldoc.perl.org/perlretut.htmland other appropriate
>> docs.
>
> Read the
On 3/11/09 Wed Mar 11, 2009 5:28 AM, "Dermot"
scribbled:
> 2009/3/11 Dr.Ruud :
>> Dermot wrote:
>>
>>> I created a small Class, initially with Moose. When I wanted an
>>> instance of the class I would call `my $instance = new MyClass`;
>>>
>>> I then removed Moose and went for a standard Pe
2009/3/11 Jim Gibson :
> On 3/11/09 Wed Mar 11, 2009 5:28 AM, "Dermot"
> scribbled:
>
>> 2009/3/11 Dr.Ruud :
>>> Dermot wrote:
>>>
I created a small Class, initially with Moose. When I wanted an
instance of the class I would call `my $instance = new MyClass`;
I then removed
Hello,
On Mar 12, 12:34 am, jimsgib...@gmail.com (Jim Gibson) wrote:
> That will test if $a starts with 'html' or 'jpg'. To test for a non-match,
> use the !~ operator:
>
I can't, since I will add more criteria into the regex,
e.g.
I need to match a.* , except a.html or a.jpg
if ( $a =~ /a\.(
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 12:53, howa wrote:
> Hello,
>
> On Mar 12, 12:34 am, jimsgib...@gmail.com (Jim Gibson) wrote:
>> That will test if $a starts with 'html' or 'jpg'. To test for a non-match,
>> use the !~ operator:
>>
>
> I can't, since I will add more criteria into the regex,
>
> e.g.
>
> I
Brent Clark wrote:
Hiya
Hello,
I got a string like so, and for the likes of me I can get regex to have
it that each line is starts with #abc#.
my $a =
"#aaa#message:details;extra:info;variable:times;#bbb#message:details;extra:info;variable:times;#ccc#not:always;the:same;ts:14:00.00;";
$
Hello everyone,
I'm a beginner and having some issues with a Perl Script I had written
for work.
I am trying to print to a network label printer. I've verified that the
printer is working on its own.
But when I try to print to it using Perl nothing happens.
Here is a copy of my code. I ge
Hi guys,
I am starting to learn Perl as the ksh scripting language (which I
don't know either) looks less than powerful.
I have used C many years ago, and write my stuff in REXX on a
mainframe, so Perl looks like the best of both worlds.
My environment is AIX 5.3 running some sort of 5.8 PERL. O
On 3/11/09 Wed Mar 11, 2009 11:36 AM, "neckha...@penntraffic.com"
scribbled:
> Hi guys,
>
> I am starting to learn Perl as the ksh scripting language (which I
> don't know either) looks less than powerful.
>
> I have used C many years ago, and write my stuff in REXX on a
> mainframe, so Perl
Aglipay, Recelyn wrote:
Hello everyone,
Hello,
I'm a beginner and having some issues with a Perl Script I had written
for work.
I am trying to print to a network label printer. I've verified that the
printer is working on its own.
But when I try to print to it using Perl nothing happens.
He
-Original Message-
> From: Aglipay, Recelyn [mailto:recelyn.agli...@ehmc.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 15:35
> To: beginners@perl.org
> Subject: Network Printing using a Perl Script
>
> Hello everyone,
>
>
>
> I'm a beginner and having some issues with a Perl Script I had wr
neckha...@penntraffic.com wrote:
Hi guys,
Hello,
I am starting to learn Perl as the ksh scripting language (which I
don't know either) looks less than powerful.
I have used C many years ago, and write my stuff in REXX on a
mainframe, so Perl looks like the best of both worlds.
My environmen
monnappa appaiah wrote:
Below is the script to login to multiple hosts and then execute the command
and give the ouput in text file
This script will login to all the hosts in input.txt(this file contains
around 137 hosts)
but when i run the scriptits giving me output for only 5 hosts wherea
Yes, that's what I am doing right now.
The question is just one of my thought.
Thank you.
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 5:44 PM, Victor Tsang wrote:
> kevin,
> To answer your question, the 'greb' in your code is just part of a string,
> it won't produce any effect.
>
> and if what you wish is to remove
Hello,
I have a hash of hashes, and I'm trying to bulk-assign some key/value
pairs to the referenced hash, using a technique I read on the
perlmonks list (hash slices, see link below). I've never been good at
working out syntax where complex data structures are concerned, and
this eludes
Neal wrote:
> I am starting to learn Perl as the ksh scripting language
> My environment is AIX 5.3 running some sort of 5.8 PERL.
I was struggling trying to learn Perl via DJGPP on Windows 95 (?) and
Programming Perl:
http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596000271/index.html
Programming Perl is
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 00:19, Chap Harrison wrote:
> Hello,
> I have a hash of hashes, and I'm trying to bulk-assign some key/value pairs
> to the referenced hash, using a technique I read on the perlmonks list (hash
> slices, see link below). I've never been good at working out syntax where
> c
On Mar 11, 2009, at 11:51 PM, Chas. Owens wrote:
Dereference the hashref as an arrayref then ask for the keys:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my %hash = ( adams => {} );
my @keys = qw/a ar af aw/;
my @values = (1, 19, 13, 11);
@{$hash{adams...@keys} = @values;
use Data::Dumper
Chap Harrison wrote:
Hello,
Hello,
I have a hash of hashes, and I'm trying to bulk-assign some key/value
pairs to the referenced hash, using a technique I read on the perlmonks
list (hash slices, see link below). I've never been good at working out
syntax where complex data structures are
Chap Harrison wrote:
On Mar 11, 2009, at 11:51 PM, Chas. Owens wrote:
Dereference the hashref as an arrayref then ask for the keys:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my %hash = ( adams => {} );
my @keys = qw/a ar af aw/;
my @values = (1, 19, 13, 11);
@{$hash{adams...@keys} = @val
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 01:27, Chap Harrison wrote:
> On Mar 11, 2009, at 11:51 PM, Chas. Owens wrote:
>
>> Dereference the hashref as an arrayref then ask for the keys:
>>
>> #!/usr/bin/perl
>>
>> use strict;
>> use warnings;
>>
>> my %hash = ( adams => {} );
>>
>> my @keys = qw/a ar af aw/;
>>
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