From: Greg Barniskis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Jack Stone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Perl script help
Date: Wed, 25 Jan 2006 13:29:39 -0600
Jack Stone wrote:
I'm using an old (2001) canned perl script to manage questions to my tech
site.
I'm using an old (2001) canned perl script to manage questions to my tech
site. It is of big help since it can answer common questions from templates
and a real time saver.
Alas, that time saves is now being diminished by junk mail about cheap drugs
and I'm trying to figure out how to filter t
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004, Shaun Friedle wrote:
> #!/usr/bin/perl
> $timezone=`date +\%z`;#Gets the offset in $timezone
> $timezone =~ s/(\+[0-9][0-9])/$1:/; #Replaces ±NN with ±NN:
> print $timezone; #Prints $timezone
The regex should allow either a plus or a min
On Fri, 2004-04-16 at 17:05, JJB wrote:
> I know nothing about writing perl scripts.
>
> Can somebody show me how to add the : in the output
> of the date command in the simple following script?
Try this:
#!/usr/bin/perl
$timezone=`date +\%z`; #Gets the offset in $timezone
$ti
Not that i am very good in perl,
In KSH scripting it's like this:
%H:%M for a 00:00 output instead of
Perhaps that will help you:-)
(Oh the command date +%H:%M)
Cheers
Well that does not work (FYI)
Cheers (perhaps Matthew's comments on this are better ;-) )
--
Kind regards,
Remko Lod
JJB wrote:
I need $timezone to hold the time zone in this format -00:00
The command date +%z will give it as -
I know nothing about writing perl scripts.
Can somebody show me how to add the : in the output
of the date command in the simple following script?
The cat statement is just so
I need $timezone to hold the time zone in this format -00:00
The command date +%z will give it as -
I know nothing about writing perl scripts.
Can somebody show me how to add the : in the output
of the date command in the simple following script?
The cat statement is just so I can see