I have two arrays:
#file_list holds a list of files in a directory, and
#name_list holds some names.
For example, these arrays could contain
#file_list = ('Bob_car', 'Bob_house', 'Bob_work', 'Fred_car', 'Fred_house', 'Fred_work', ...);
#name_list = ('Bob', 'Fred', ...);
(the real data is not that simple).
My goal is to compare each file with every name and see if they match. They match if the file string starts with the name.
I could then use these matches to sort the files into new directories, based on their corresponding name.
Here is my code:
for ( my $i = 0; $i < scalar #file_list ; $i++ )
{
for ( my $j = 0; $j < #name_list ; $j++ )
{
if ( $file_list[ $i ] =~ m/^$name_list[ $j ]/ )
{
print "$file_list[ $i ] goes with $name_list[ $j ]\n";
}
else
{
print "no match\n";
}
}
}
However, I don't get any matches. I've tested the individual loops and they are working. Else, is there something off about the regex?
About how the arrays were made:
For #name_list, the file containing the names is organized in a seemingly random way, just because of how it was used for something else. The names in that file are on several different lines, with lots of blank lines in between and lots of blank entries within lines. Names can appear more than once.
I used the following code to make #name_list:
while (my $line = <$OriginalFILE>)
{
chomp $line;
my #current_line = split( "\t", $line );
for ( my $i = 0; $i < scalar #current_line ; $i ++ )
{
if ( $current_line[ $i ] =~ m/^\s*$/ )
{
# print "$current_line[$i] is blank\n";
}
else
{
push( #raw_name_list, $current_line[ $i ] );
}
} # end of for
} # while
# collect list without repeat instances of the same name
my %unique = ();
foreach my $name (#raw_name_list)
{
$unique{$name} ++;
}
my #name_list = keys %unique;
foreach my $name ( #name_list )
{
# print "$name\n";
chomp $name;
unless(mkdir $name, 0700)
{
die "Unable to create directory called $name\n";
}
}
The array #file_list was made using:
opendir(DIR, $ARGV[1]);
my #file_list = grep ! /^\./, readdir DIR;
closedir(DIR);
# print #file_list;
#amon, here is what i did to test the loops and regex:
FILE: for my $file (#transposed_files) {
print "$file\n";
for my $name (#transposedunique) {
print "i see this $name\n";
if ($file =~ /^\Q$name\E/) {
print "$file goes with $name\n";
next FILE;
}
}
#print "no match for $file\n";
}
oh, and I transposed the arrays, so that they would print to an outfile into separate rows.
Short version: You are building your name array wrong. Look at this line:
$unique{name} ++;
You are just incrementing the name entry of the hash. You probably wanted the $name variable.
The Longer Version
On English, and Foreach-Loops
Your code is a bit unperlish and looks more like C than like Perl. Perl is much closer to English than you might think. From the original wording of your question:
take the first element from #file_list and then to compare that to each element in #name_list
You wrote this as
for (my $i = 0; $i < #file_list; $i++) {
for (my $j = 0; $j < #name_list; $j++) {
...; # compare $file_list[$i] with $name_list[$j]
}
}
I'd rather do
for my $file (#file_list) {
for my $name (#name_list) {
...; # compare $file with $name
}
}
and save myself from the hassle of array subscripting.
Building Correct Regexes
Your code contains the following test:
$file_list[ $i ] =~ m/^$name_list[ $j ]/
This will not do what you think if $name_list[$j] contains special characters like (, ., +. You can match the literal contents of a variable by enclosing it in \Q ... \E. This would make the code
$file =~ /^\Q$name\E/
(if used with my variant of the loop).
You could also go the nifty route and compare the leading substring directly:
$name eq substr $file, 0, length($name)
This expresses the same condition.
On Loop Control
I will make two assumptions:
You are only interested in the first matching name for any file
You only want to print the no match message if no name was found
Perl allows us to break out of arbitrary loops, or restart the current iteration, or go directly to the next iteration, without using flags, as you would do in other languages. All we have to do is to label our loops like LABEL: for (...).
So once we have a match, we can start our search for the next file. Also, we only want to print no match if we left the inner loop without going to the next file. This code does it:
FILE: for my $file (#file_list) {
for my $name (#name_list) {
if ($file =~ /^\Q$name\E/) {
print "$file goes with $name\n";
next FILE;
}
}
print "no match for $file\n";
}
The Zen of Negation
In your file parsing code, you express a condition
if ($field =~ /^\s*$/) {
} else {
# do this stuff only if the field does not consist only of
# zero or more whitespace characters
}
That description is far to complex. How about
if ($field =~ /\S/) {
# do this stuff only if the field contains a non-whitespace character.
}
The same condition, but simpler, and more efficient.
Simplify your Parse
In short, your file parsing code can be condensed to
my %uniq;
while (<$OriginalFILE>) {
chomp;
$uniq{$_} = undef for grep /\S/, split /\t/;
}
my #name_list = sort { length($b) <=> length($a) } keys %uniq;
The split function takes a regex as first argument, and will split on $_ if no other string is specified. It returns a list of fields.
The grep function takes a condition and a list, and will return all elements of a list that match the condition. The current element is in $_, which regexes match by default. For explanation of the regex, see above.
Note: This still allows for the fields to contain whitespace, even in leading position. To split on all whitespace, you can give split the special argument of a string containing a single space: split ' '. This would make the grep unneccessary.
The for loop can also be used as a statement modifier, i.e. like EXPR for LIST. The current element is in $_. We assign something to the $_ entry in our %uniq hash (which is already initialized to the empty hash). This could be a number, but undef works as well.
The keys are returned in a seemingly random order. But as multiple names could match a file, but we only want to select one match, we will have to match the most specific name first. Therefore, I sort the names after their length in descending order.
Your code seems to work for me. All I did was construct two arrays like this:
my #file_list = qw/Bob_car Bob_house Bob_work Fred_car Fred_house Fred_work/;
my #name_list = qw/Fred Bob Mary/;
Then running your code produces output like this:
no match
Bob_car goes with Bob
no match
no match
Bob_house goes with Bob
no match
no match
Bob_work goes with Bob
no match
Fred_car goes with Fred
no match
no match
Fred_house goes with Fred
no match
no match
Fred_work goes with Fred
no match
no match
So it looks like it's working.
A common problem with reading input from files or from a user is forgetting to strip the newline character from the end of the input. This could be your problem. If so, have a read about perldoc -f chomp, and just chomp each value as you add it to your array.
I'm always interested in doing things in efficient way so every time I see O(N^2) algorithm rings bells for me. Why it should be O(N*M) and not O(N+M)?
my $re = join('|',map quotemeta, #name_list);
$re = qr/$re/;
for my $file (#file_list) {
if($file =~ /^($re)/) {
my $name = $1;
... do what you need
}
}
its look something wrong in loop.
follow comments in code
for ( my $i = 0; $i < scalar #file_list ; $i++ )
{
#use some string variable assign it ""
for ( my $j = 0; $j < #name_list ; $j++ )
{
if ( $file_list[ $i ] =~ m/^$name_list[ $j ]/ )
{
# assign string variable to founded name_list[$j]
break loop
}
}
# check condition if string not equal to "" match found print your requirement with string value else match not found
}
Related
I have a db of places people have ordered items from. I parsed the list to get the city and state so it prints like this - city, state (New York, NY) etc....
I use the variables $city and $state but I want to count how many times each city and state occur so it looks like this - city, state, count (Seattle, WA 8)
I have all of it working except the count .. I am using a hash but I can't figure out what is wrong with this hash:
if ($varc==3) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)(\w+.*)(?:\<)/;
$city = $1;
}
if ($vars==5) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)((\w+.*))(?:\<)/;
$state = $1;
# foreach $count (keys %counts){
# $counts = {$city, $state} {$count}++;
# print $counts;
# }
print "$city, $state\n";
}
foreach $count (keys %counts){
$counts = {$city, $state} {$count}++;
print $counts;
}
Instead of printing city and state you can build a "location" string with both items and use the following counting code:
# Declare this variable before starting to parse the locations.
my %counts = ();
# Inside of the loop that parses the city and state, let's assume
# that you've got $city and $state already...
my $location = "$city, $state";
$counts{$location} += 1;
}
# When you've processed all locations then the counts will be correct.
foreach $location (keys %counts) {
print "OK: $location => $counts{$location}\n";
}
# OK: New York, NY => 5
# OK: Albuquerque, NM => 1
# OK: Los Angeles, CA => 2
This is going to be a mix of an answer and a code review. I will start with a warning though.
You are trying to parse what looks like XML with Regular Expressions. While this can be done, it should probably not be done. Use an existing parser instead.
How do I know? Stuff that is between angle brackets looks like the format is XML, unless you have a very weird CSV file.
# V V
$line =~ /(?:\>)(\w+.*)(?:\<)/;
Also note that you don't need to escape < and >, they have no special meaning in regex.
Now to your code.
First, make sure you always use strict and use warnings, so you are aware of stuff that goes wrong. I can tell you're not because the $count in your loop has no my.
What's $vars (with an s), and what's $varc (with a c). I am guessing that has to do with the state and the city. Is it the column number? In an XML file? Huh.
$line =~ /(?:\>)((\w+.*))(?:\<)/;
Why are there two capture groups, both capturing the same thing?
Anyway, you want to count how often each combination of state and city occurs.
foreach $count (keys %counts){
$counts = {$city, $state} {$count}++;
print $counts;
}
Have you run this code? Even without strict, it gives a syntax error. I'm not even sure what it's supposed to do, so I can't tell you how to fix it.
To implement counting, you need a hash. You got that part right. But you need to declare that hash variable outside of your file reading loop. Then you need to create a key for your city and state combination in the hash, and increment it every time that combination is seen.
my %counts; # declare outside the loop
while ( my $line = <$fh> ) {
chomp $line;
if ( $varc == 3 ) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)(\w+.*)(?:\<)/;
$city = $1;
}
if ( $vars == 5 ) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)((\w+.*))(?:\<)/;
$state = $1;
print "$city, $state\n";
$count{"$city, $state"}++; # increment when seen
}
}
You have to parse the whole file before you can know how often each combination is in the file. So if you want to print those together, you will have to move the printing outside of the loop that reads the file, and iterate the %count hash by keys at a later point.
my %counts; # declare outside the loop
while ( my $line = <$fh> ) {
chomp $line;
if ( $varc == 3 ) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)(\w+.*)(?:\<)/;
$city = $1;
}
if ( $vars == 5 ) {
$line =~ /(?:\>)((\w+.*))(?:\<)/;
$state = $1;
$count{"$city, $state"}++; # increment when seen
}
}
# iterate again to print final counts
foreach my $item ( sort keys %counts ) {
print "$item $counts{$item}\n";
}
I have a below fix file and I want to find out how many orders are sent at same time. I am using tag 52 as the sending time.
Below is the file,
8=FIX.4.2|9=115|35=A|52=20080624-12:43:38.021|10=186|
8=FIX.4.2|52=20080624-12:43:38.066|10=111|
8=FIX.4.2|9=105|35=1|22=BOO|52=20080624-12:43:39.066|10=028|
If I want to count number how many same occurances of Tag 52 values were sent? How can I check?
So far, I have written below code but not giving me the frequency.
#!/usr/bin/perl
$f = '2.txt';
open (F,"<$f") or die "Can not open\n";
while (<F>)
{
chomp $_;
#data = split (/\|/,$_);
foreach $data (#data)
{
if ( $data == 52){
#data1 = split ( /=/,$data);
for my $j (#data1)
{
$hash{$j}++;
} for my $j (keys %hash)
{
print "$j: ", $hash{j}, "\n";
}
}
}
}
Here is your code corrected:
#!/usr/bin/perl
$f = '2.txt';
open (F,"<$f") or die "Can not open\n";
my %hash;
while (<F>) {
chomp $_;
#data = split (/\|/,$_);
foreach $data (#data) {
if ($data ~= /^52=(.*)/) {
$hash{$1}++;
}
}
}
for my $j (keys %hash) {
print "$j: ", $hash{j}, "\n";
}
Explanation:
if ( $data == 52) compares the whole field against value 52, not a substring of the field. Of course, you do not have such fields, and the test always fails. I replaces it with a regexp comparison.
The same regexp gives an opportunity to catch a timestamp immediately, without a need to split the field once more. It is done by (.*) in the regexp and $1 in the following assignment.
It is hardly makes sense to output the hash for every line of input data (your code outputs it within the foreach loop). I moved it down. But maybe, outputting the current hash for every line is what you wanted, I do not know.
I have been using this perl script (thanks to Jeff Schaller) to match 3 or more words in the title fields of two separate csv files.
Original question here:
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/283942/matching-3-or-more-words-from-fields-in-separate-csv-files?noredirect=1#comment494461_283942
I have also added some exception functionality following advice from meuh:
#!/bin/perl
my #csv2 = ();
open CSV2, "<csv2" or die;
#csv2=<CSV2>;
close CSV2;
my %csv2hash = ();
for (#csv2) {
chomp;
my ($title) = $_ =~ /^.+?,\s*([^,]+?),/; #/ match the title
$csv2hash{$_} = $title;
}
open CSV1, "<csv1" or die;
while (<CSV1>) {
chomp;
my ($title) = $_ =~ /^.+?,\s*([^,]+?),/; #/ match the title
my #titlewords = split /\s+/, $title; #/ get words
my #new; #add exception words which shouldn't be matched
foreach my $t (#titlewords){
push(#new, $t) if $t !~ /^(and|if|where)$/i;
}
#titlewords = #new;
my $desired = 3;
my $matched = 0;
foreach my $csv2 (keys %csv2hash) {
my $count = 0;
my $value = $csv2hash{$csv2};
foreach my $word (#titlewords) {
++$count if $value =~ /\b$word\b/i;
last if $count >= $desired;
}
if ($count >= $desired) {
print "$csv2\n";
++$matched;
}
}
print "$_\n" if $matched;
}
close CSV1;
During my testing, one issue I've found that I would like to tweak is that if csv2 contains a single common word such as the, if this is replicated in csv1 three or more times then three positive matches is found. To clarify:
If csv1 contains:
1216454,the important people feel the same way as the others, 15445454, 45445645
^ i.e. there are three insatnces of the in the above line
If csv2 contains:
14564564,the tallest man on earth,546456,47878787
^ i.e. there is one instance of the in this line
Then I would like only one word to be classed as matching, and there be no output (based on my desired number of matching words- 3 ) because there is only one instance of the matching word in one of the files.
However if:
csv1 contained:
1216454,the important people feel the same way as the others,15445454, 45445645
and csv2 contained:
15456456,the only way the man can sing the blues,444545,454545
Then, as there are three matching words in each (i.e. 3 instances of the word the in each title, then I would like this to be classed as a matching title based on my desired number of matching words being 3 or more, thus generating the output:
1216454,the important people feel the same way as the others,15445454, 45445645
15456456,the only way the man can sing the blues,444545,454545
I would like to amend the script so that if there is one instance of a word in a csv, and multiple instances of the same word in the other csv then that is classed as only one match. However, if there were say 3 instance of the word the in both files, then it should still be classed as three matches. Basically I would like matches to be on a word for word basis.
Everything about the script other than this is perfect so I would rather not go back to the drawing board completely as I am happy with everything other than this.
I hope I've explained it ok, if anyone need any clarification let me know.
If you just wan to count unique matches, you can use a hash instead of a list to collect the words from csv1, just like you do for csv2, and then also count the occurrences of each word separately:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
my #csv2 = ();
open CSV2, "<csv2" or die;
#csv2=<CSV2>;
close CSV2;
my %csv2hash = ();
for (#csv2) {
chomp;
my ($title) = $_ =~ /^.+?,\s*([^,]+?),/; #/ match the title
$csv2hash{$_} = $title;
}
open CSV1, "<csv1" or die;
while (<CSV1>) {
chomp;
my ($title) = $_ =~ /^.+?,\s*([^,]+?),/; #/ match the title
my %words;
$words{$_}++ for split /\s+/, $title; #/ get words
## Collect unique words
my #titlewords = keys(%words);
my #new; #add exception words which shouldn't be matched
foreach my $t (#titlewords){
push(#new, $t) if $t !~ /^(and|if|where)$/i;
}
#titlewords = #new;
my $desired = 3;
my $matched = 0;
foreach my $csv2 (keys %csv2hash) {
my $count = 0;
my $value = $csv2hash{$csv2};
foreach my $word (#titlewords) {
my #matches = ( $value=~/\b$word\b/ig );
my $numIncsv2 = scalar(#matches);
#matches = ( $title=~/\b$word\b/ig );
my $numIncsv1 = scalar(#matches);
++$count if $value =~ /\b$word\b/i;
if ($count >= $desired || ($numIncsv1 >= $desired && $numIncsv2 >= $desired)) {
$count = $desired+1;
last;
}
}
if ($count >= $desired) {
print "$csv2\n";
++$matched;
}
}
print "$_\n" if $matched;
}
close CSV1;
I'm currently trying to take user arguments (usually 2) that are text files, get the amount of characters, lines, and words from the text file and display them back. My code currently adds them all together instead of listing them separately for each file. How do I list the file name based on user arguments, and the amount of lines, characters and words for each file without adding them together? Thank you for taking time to read this.
#!usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
my $user_files = #ARGV;
chomp($user_files);
my #parts;
my $word_count = 0;
my $total_words = 0;
my $line_count = 0;
foreach my $line (<>)
{
#parts = split (/\s+/,$line);
$line_count += (line =~tr/\n//);
$word_count += length($line) + 1;
$total_words += scalar(#parts);
}
for(my $i = 0; $i < 1; $i++)
{
print "File name:", #ARGV,
"\t\t Word Count: ", $word_count,
"\t\t Total words: ", $total_words,
"\t\t Total lines: ", $line_count,
"\n";
}
There are two basic things you need to change to enable this to work.
Use $ARGV - when reading across multiple files using <>, it contains the name of the current file
Store the data in a hash (that is keyed on $ARGV)
In this sample, I've retained all of your calculations (but I think you'll need to reconsider some of those) and made a few other changes to clean up your code a bit.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings; # better than '-w'
my %files; # Store all the data here
# While is better than foreach here as is reads the file one line at a time.
# Each line goes into $_
while (<>) {
# By default, split splits $_ on whitespace
my #parts = split;
# By default, tr/// works on $_
$files{$ARGV}{line_count} += tr/\n//;
# I think this calculation is wrong.
# length() has no relation to word count. And why add 1 to it?
$files{$ARGV}{word_count} += length($_) + 1;
# Addition imposes scalar context, no need for the scalar keyword
$files{$ARGV}{total_words} += #parts;
}
# Print all the information in the hash
foreach (keys %files) {
print "File name: $_",
"\t\t Word Count: $files{$_}{word_count}",
"\t\t Total words: $files{$_}{total_words}",
"\t\t Total lines: $files{$_}{line_count}",
"\n";
}
This line :
foreach my $line(<>)
Is taking input from STDIN. You need to do something like:
for my $file (#user_files) {
open my $fin, '<', $file or die $!;
while ( my $line = <$fin> ) {
# count stuff
}
close $fin;
# print counted stuff
}
Also note that if you want to take multiple filenames as args:
my $user_files = #ARGV;
will only take the first arg. You probably want:
my #user_files = #ARGV;
Also, the chomp on an arg is unnecessary.
In your script, you're counting all the files before printing. Which is good, but you probably want to store that data in an array or hash. That data structure might look like this :
$file_counts = [
{
$file_name1 => {
characters => $characters,
words => $words,
lines => $lines,
}
},
{
$file_name2 => {
characters => $characters,
words => $words,
lines => $lines,
}
},
];
for ($i=0; $i<10; $i++)
{
my $v1 = $sel->get_text("//body[\#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/**div**/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div");
my $v2 = $sel->get_text("//body[#\id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/**div**/table/tbody/tr/td[2]/div/div")
print ($v1 . $v2);
}
For every iteration, it has to find the 14th element starting from div[10] & replace it with the increased div[ ] element (Ex: if 14th element is div, replace it by div[2]. In the next iterartion find 14th element i.e., div[2] & replace it by div[3] & so on ).
By using PATTERN matching, it can't. Is there any method by using regex for finding that particular element & replacing it ? how can i do it ?
my $a = "//body[\#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/**div**/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div";
my #arr = split ('/' , $a);
print "#arr \n";
my $size1 = #arr;
print "$size1\n";
print $arr[16];
foreach my $a2 (#arr)
{
print "$a2 \n";
}
my $b = "//body[\#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/**div**/table/tbody/tr/td[2]/div/div";
Two variables as mentioned in the above question as v1 & v2 (edited as $a and $b), the modification has to apply for both of them. I think i'm almost near to what you've told. Can yoy please help me further
use 5.010;
my $xpath = q(//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div);
for my $i (0..10) {
my #nodes = split qr'/', $xpath;
$nodes[16] .= "[$i]" unless 0 == $i;
say join '/', #nodes;
}
Results:
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[1]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[2]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[3]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[4]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[5]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[6]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[7]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[8]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[9]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
//body[#id='ext-gen3']/div[10]/div[2]/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div/div[2]/div/div[10]/table/tbody/tr/td/div/div
Ummm, all elements are separated by /, right? So you can use the native split method to split the portion of the text following div[10] based on /. Store it in an array $arr. Merge it to find the length of the string, say $len. Find the index of the div[10], say $orig_index. Then you find the 14th element, do a regex match to see which format it is in:
$arr[13] =~ /div([\d+])?/;
if ($1) {
$arr[13] =~ /div[$1]/div[($1+1)]/e;
}
else {
$arr[13] = div[2];
}
Now that the 14th element is changed, concatenate the array to get the new output string for the portion from the portion between div[10] and the 14th one:
{
local $" = '';
$newstring = "#arr";
}
splice($originalstring,$orig_index,$len,$newstring);
I think that will do.