CSCI 3294 (Seminar: UNIX Power Tools), Fall 2016:
Homework 5
- Credit:
- 30 points.
Be sure you have read, or at least skimmed,
the assigned readings for 9/28.
Please include with each part of the assignment the Honor Code pledge or
just the word ``pledged'', plus one or more of the following about
collaboration and help (as many as apply).1Text in italics is explanatory or something for you to
fill in.
For written assignments, it should go right after your name and
the assignment number; for programming assignments, it should go
in comments at the start of your program.
- This assignment is entirely my own work.
- This assignment is entirely my own work, except for portions
I got from the assignment itself
(some programming assignments include ``starter
code'')
or sample programs for the course (from which you
can borrow freely -- that's what they're for).
- I worked with names of other students on this
assignment.
- I got help with this assignment from source of help -- ACM
tutoring, another student in the course, the instructor, etc.
- I got significant help from outside source --
a book other than the textbook (give title and author),
a Web site (give its URL), etc..
(``Significant'' here means more than just a little
assistance with tools -- you don't need to tell me that you
looked up an error message on the Web, but if you found
an algorithm or a code sketch, tell me about that.)
- I provided significant help to names of students on this
assignment.
(``Significant'' here means more than just a little
assistance with tools -- you don't need to tell me about
helping other students decipher compiler error messages,
but beyond that, do tell me.)
(These aren't exactly programming problems, but I want your answers by
e-mail so I can enlist the computer's help in checking them. So,
follow the standard instructions below, except that's okay to just send
me all your answers in the body of the e-mail.)
Do the following programming problems.
You will end up with at
least one code file per problem.
Submit your program source (and any other needed files)
by sending mail to
bmassing@cs.trinity.edu with each file as an attachment.
Please use a subject line that mentions the course and
the assignment (e.g.,
``csci 3294 hw 5'' or
``UNIX hw 5'').
You can develop your programs on any system that provides the
needed functionality, but I will test them on one of the department's
Linux machines, so you should probably make sure they work
in that environment before turning them in.
- (5 points)
Write a grep command to search all the files
in the current directory for lines containing either
your Linux username (e.g., bmassing) or your last name.
(You don't have to
also search subdirectories, just files in the current
directory itself.)
- (5 points)
Write a grep command to search all files in the
current directory for strings that could be Social Security
numbers (strings of the form nnn-nn-nnnn, where
each n is a decimal digit).
- (5 points)
Suppose you have a Scala program in file foo.scala
containing the not-very-well-named variable Bar,
and you want to change this variable to bar
everywhere it occurs, without changing other occurrences
of the string Bar (such as myBar or
BarFoo).
Write a sed command that makes this change.
(Note that essentially the same command
would work in vim.) Don't worry about saving the
output back into the file; the point here is the command
to make the change.
- (15 points)
Suppose you have a text file (call it foo)
containing a list of names and e-mail addresses.
Each line contains first an e-mail address
(which for simplicity we'll define as
any combination of letters, digits, underscores,
and periods, followed by a @, followed by
any combination of letters, digits, underscores,
and periods),
then some delimiter (a space, a colon, a comma -
anything that can't be part of the address as just defined),
and then a name.
Write a sed command to reverse the addresses
and names, removing the delimiters and leaving at least
one space between the name and the address.
For example,
``me@mail.com: This Is Me!'' would be
changed to ``This Is Me! me@mail.com''.
(Hint: Backreferences may be useful.)
Again, don't worry about saving the changes back to
the file.
Also don't worry about what happens to lines that
don't have the form described (e.g., no e-mail address),
or about pruning out extra spaces.
Footnotes
- ... apply).1
-
Credit where credit is due:
I based the wording of this list on a posting to a SIGCSE mailing
list. SIGCSE is the ACM's Special Interest Group on CS Education.
Berna Massingill
2016-10-31