and now for conky & gremlins
PJ
af.gourmet at videotron.ca
Thu Nov 5 14:26:16 UTC 2009
Polytropon wrote:
> On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 18:25:58 -0400, PJ <af.gourmet at videotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> output should be: 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 etc.
>> is: 1 2 3 4 5 6....
>>
>> the calendar.sh is exactly:
>> #!/bin/sh
>> cal | awk 'NR>1' | sed -e 's/ / /g' -e 's/[^ ] /& /g' -e 's/..*/
>> &/' -e "s/\ `date +%d`/\[`date +%d`\]/"
>>
>
> It's quite obviously. Let's try the last substitution
> argument in plain shell:
>
> % date +%d
> 05
>
> But the command creates this:
>
> Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
>
> The leading zero is missing, so there's no substition that
> changes "5" into "[5]", because the search pattern is "05".
>
Ok, I see... I'm not too good in programming. I guess I didn't notice
the previous to the first days of November the date was always 2
digits.. how do I get rid of the zero? Regex substitution or something
like that?
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