Normally I would do it with grep/sed/awk in a shell script.
Sure you could. Buy why? You can do that in Perl without
spawning off a process for each grep/sed/awk operation
I am performing. Comparision:
netstat -s | grep 'Trans' | awk '{... ehh... whatever...
just used three processes...
open PIPE... whatever...
my @line = grep 'Trans',<PIPE>;
close PIPOE
used two. I know that is a weak example, but I hope
it clarifies my position.
Plan your work... work your plan...
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