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ppt project now was moved to SPAN.
See Casey West - ppt-0.14 - search.cpan.org
Source tree at Sourceforge is still exists: SourceForge.net Repository - [ppt] Index of -ppt-bin
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On Thu, 14 Oct 2004, Chris Devers wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Oct 2004, Dave Kettmann wrote:
>
>
> Okay then.
>
> perldoc -f split
>
> Also speaks for itself :-)To be less snarky, you probably need to open up your file, iterate over it line by line, using split to break each line up into chunks, then write out a new array with the fields you want and the order you want them. This second array can then be written out to disc; if you want you could even read & write within the same loop.
But the key point is that split is often the easiest way to break apart the fields in a file that is, for example, CSV formatted.
Give that a try, write some code to attempt it, and let the list know if you have any problems in getting it to work.
--
Chris Devers
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Here is a source code of reimplementation used in Perl Power tools taken from Sourceforge repository:
#!/usr/bin/env perl # # cut -- remove sections from each line of files # # Rich Lafferty# Thu Mar 4 02:33:30 EST 1999 # # Perl Power Tools -- http://language.perl.com/ppt/ # $^W = 1; # -w use strict; use Getopt::Std; use File::Basename; ## What's my name? my $me = basename($0); ## Grab options getopts ('b:c:d:f:ns', \my %opt); # There's no difference between -b and -c on any unix I # use regularly -- it's for i18n. Thus, -n is a noop, too. $opt{b} = $opt{c} if defined $opt{c}; ## Byte operations if (defined ($opt{b})) { my @list = split (/,/, $opt{b}); while (<>) { chomp; foreach my $item (@list) { my ($start,$end) = split (/-/, $item); die "$me: invalid byte list\nType '$me' alone for usage.\n" if ($start and $end and $start > $end); # parameters overlap? # change cut's list parameters to substr's parameters $start--; # cut counts from 1, not 0 $start = 0 if $start < 0; $end = $start + 1 unless $item =~ /-/; $start = length if $start > length; if ($end) { $end = length if $end > length; printf ("%s", substr ($_, $start, $end - $start)); } else { printf ("%s", substr ($_, $start)); } } print "\n"; } exit 0; } ## Field operations elsif (defined ($opt{f})) { my @list = split (/,/, $opt{f}); my $delim = "\t"; $delim = substr ($opt{d}, 0, 1) if defined $opt{d}; while (<>) { chomp; # Only waste time on lines with delimiters if (/$delim/) { foreach my $item (@list) { my ($start,$end) = split (/-/, $item); die "$me: invalid byte list\nType '$me' alone for usage.\n" if ($start and $end and $start > $end); # parameters overlap? # change cut's list parameters to substr's parameters $start--; # cut counts from 1, not 0 $start = 0 if $start < 0; $end = $start + 1 unless $item =~ /-/; my @hunk = split (/$delim/, $_); # don't let parameters exceed number of fields $end = @hunk if (! $end or $end > @hunk); $start = @hunk if $start > @hunk; # If start of field is bigger than number of items, cut(1) # still outputs a newline -- but we won't enter the for() print "\n" if ($start == $end and $item eq $list[$#list]); for (my $i = $start; $i < $end; $i++) { print $hunk[$i]; if ($item eq $list[$#list] and $i == $end - 1) { # if done print "\n"; } else { print $delim; } } } } else { # no delimiter in line print "$_\n" unless $opt{"s"}; } } exit 0; } ## $SIG{__CLUE__} print < list [C<-n>] [file ...] cut C<-c> list [file ...] cut C<-f> list [C<-d> delim] [C<-s>] [file ...] =head1 DESCRIPTION The B utility selects portions of each line (as specified by I ) from each I
(or the standard input by default), and writes them to the standard output. The items specified by I can be in terms of column position or in terms of fields delimited by a special character. Column numbering starts from 1. I
is a comma- or whitespace-separated set of increasing numbers and/or number ranges. Number ranges consist of a number, a dash ('-'), and a second number and select the fields or columns from the first number to the second, inclusive. Numbers or number ranges may be preceded by a dash, which selects all fields or columns from 1 to the first number. Numbers or number ranges may be followed by a dash, which selects all fields or columns from the last number to the end of the line. Numbers and number ranges may be repeated, overlapping, and in any order. It is not an error to select fields or columns not present in the input line. =head1 OPTIONS B
accepts the following options: =over 4 =item -b list The I specifies byte positions. =item -c list The I
specifies character positions. =item -d string Use the first character of I
as the field delimiter character instead of the tab character. =item -f list The I specifies fields, delimited in the input by a single tab character. Output fields are separated by a single tab character. =item -n Do not split multi-byte characters. =item -s Suppresses lines with no field delimiter characters. Unless specified, lines with no delimiters are passed through unmodified. =back =head1 BUGS B
does not understand multibyte characters; the C<-c> and C<-b> options function identically, and C<-n> does nothing. =head1 STANDARDS This B implementation is compatible with the I implementation. =head1 AUTHOR The Perl implementation of B was written by Rich Lafferty, I . =head1 COPYRIGHT and LICENSE This program is free and open software. You may use, copy, modify, distribute and sell this program (and any modified variants) in any way you wish, provided you do not restrict others to do the same. =cut
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