I'm trying to get my program to go through the string typed in by the user and strip it of EVERYTHING but the numbers. I can't place my finger on what I'm missing.
Code:
Code: #include<iostream>
#include<string>
using namespace std ;
int main()
I am trying to delete these symbols "[ ]" from a file but it says string not found. I tried: %s/[//g while editing the file not working also tried sed -e '/[/d' and sed '/]/d' still no job.
I am doing molecular dynamics where I have to edit files. I have looked at tutorials for grep and sed but can't find my solution. The files produced in my simulations look something like this:
ATOM 1825 NE2 GLN 112 113.646 27.895 14.456 ATOM 1826 HE21 GLN 112 114.020 26.957 14.490 ATOM 1827 HE22 GLN 112 112.649 28.039 14.388
I've been trying to understand pthread in C a little better. So I made a simple program that takes in a string from the command line and creates a thread to print the string. I've looked online and copied the basic concepts but there are something things I'm confused about. The programs works just fine, but I have questions. Here's what I have so far.
[Code]....
One thing I'd like to know is why the 3rd argument in the pthread_create function which is my SendMessage function needs to be typecasted to a void pointer and then send the address of the function. Also as for the 4th argument, I would see typecasting to void pointer in some of the pthread examples I saw online, but in my case I'm passing a char pointer, would this be correct? In which case would I ever want to pass a void pointer?
Do I need a pthread_exit(NULL) in my main and in the SendMessage function? If so, why? I added the sleep() function so that I could let the pthread_exit function in my SendMessage function execute first. I simply saw that the online examples on pthread had pthread_exit() in both locations.
I need to creates string suffixes out of a Reference string. for eg. suffixes of abcdefg will be
1)bcdefg 2)cdefg 3)defg and so on...
create an array of pointers to point to the first few characters and then use that pointer to print the rest of the string.But when i print using the pointer i get GARBAGE values! shudn't std::cout<<ptr[w] print the string following the char it is pointing to? why do i get garbage values?
How can I just take the type of the file at the end? I know I can use strrchr() for a period to get the pointer to the period just before file type. Is there a build in string function that will just take the rest of the string from a certain point on forward in the string? I know it wouldn't be much work to make it myself, but I figured I would find out if it already existed before doing it.
I've been given a custom-made string class which handles string, wstring and bstr. It has a number of methods and assignment operators to convert to and from different types. The app I work on compiles happily in VS6 and VS2008, but when trying to compile in Redhat (version 4.1.1 in Redhat 5.0)
I have the following two type of strings1: A/D2: A/C/DI am trying to write a subroutine to check whether all of the letters in string 1 appears in string 2. If yes, return true. If not, return false. In the above example, all the letters (A and D) in string 1 are also present in string 2, so I return true.
I remember reading that using sed, you can do this with parentheses: s/abc(something)def/(something)else/g I can't find an explanation of how to do something like this with Awk. Say you have this in an HTML file, where (number) stands for a one or two-digit number:
Do I have the convert the int to a string using stringstream then convert the string to a char? or is there a more direct way?Also is there a way to tell the length of a int?
I have a serial port program which is reading a string .if(read(readfd,sResult,1)>0)where sResult is unsigned char sResult[10];if sResult is array of 10 then iam getting string perfectly but if iam making sResult only as unsigned char I am getting NULL value CODE BELOW
Code: unsigned char sResult; main() { readfd = open("/dev/ttyUSB0", O_RDONLY); if (readfd == -1) { perror("READ: open_port: Unable to open /dev/ttyUSB0-
Currently, I'm working on personal project. and I'm kinda stuck. What I want to do is that open a file, and edit that file (deleting unwanted characters). The problem arises after I deleted unwanted characters, the file still has the same length of the original one. Let's assume that we have a file with "1234" in it. I deleted "3" ( I overwrite "\0" ) so now when I check the file, it's 124. But when I check the length, the both have the same size as 4
Here is an example source code int length, length2; num = open("a.dat", 2) length = lseek(num, 0, 2); // Initial length lseek(num, 2, 0); // editing write(num, "\0", 1); length2 = lseek(num, 0, 2); // Final length close(num);
When I print those values those are exactly the same. Length2 should be one less than length, but the both are 4. What's wrong in m code? Am I supposed to use different character rather than "\0"?
I have a very, very large log file (360MB) that I'm trying to thin out. As it turns out the majority of this file has entries that aren't necessary so I'm attempting to build a command that will strip these out. The following command works to display only the data that I do not want:
This displays exactly the data I want to delete from the file by displaying the expression and six lines above it and five lines below it. However I'm at a loss as to how to remove this data from the output and display everything else. I looked into the -v option with grep redirecting the output to a new file:
However it doesn't work, the new file is the same size as the old one. What am I doing wrong? Is there a better method of doing this? I'm a bit out of my element since the method I'd normally use can't handle files of this size.
I've tried a number of suggestions found on the internet and none of them work. Here's one:Code:mv "$x" ~/.Trash/...where $x is the pathname of the file passed to the script.I've also tried different paths to Trash - on Desktop, in Home folder, in my user folder, it makes no difference. Either nothing happens, or more often, the file is simply copied to my desktop or userfolder with the name "Trash".What is the actual path to the Trash folder and how can I move files there? I'm using Ubuntu 10.04.
I'm having problems completing my school exercises with awk.
Heres the desired outcome:
Code:
./my_awk 2 ACG GAG ATT AGG AGG ATC CCA CCA CAC AGG ACG GAG ATT AGG AGG ATC
So it generates data in group of threes, 8 groups per row and prints it. My problem is that I can't seem to get awk to append stuff to string so I could print it nicely to screen. It just prints empty lines per the parameter given to it.
I need to extract a price from a string, this may vary in the future so it may be 12.99 or 14.99. i thought a sed command might crack it and i need to write to a file:<td><b class="priceLarge">?6.99</b>I need to extract the price 6.99(with no ?)so extract anyhting between "> and </B> and write it to a file such as tmp1.txt .
i am compiling the following program in linux. it's in c language. after the compilation with gcc when i run the executable file. it asks for input. but when i enter a name. i prints "Segmentation fault" and then terminate the program. can you please help me.