sorry for taking out strict :)

Maybe you don't know yet how sorry you might be later. ;)

now i would need to compare "output" with "correct". "correct" is a file with diacritic and i need to know how many words were replaced good. is there some way to do this in perl? thank you

Presumably, the "correct" file and your "test output" file should have the same number of lines and the same number of word tokens. (The unix "wc" command would be good for confirming that -- if you have ms-windows with cygwin installed, "wc" comes with that; for any given input file, it reports the number of lines, words and bytes.)

And if you have "wc", then you also have the unix "diff" command. No perl scripting necessary for this task. But if you wanted to write a perl script for it anyway, just open both files for input, use a single loop that will read a line from each file, tokenize the two corresponding lines into two arrays, then use a nested loop to compare the tokens. Nothing complicated about that.


In reply to Re^3: fill diacritic into text by graff
in thread fill diacritic into text by jajaja

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