hounder Posted April 21, 2010 Posted April 21, 2010 (edited) in short, im working on a program that downloads the source of a webpage as a .txt file, then searches through the file for a given string and if found, outputs the line number of the specified string. im having problems with the last bit, which is finding the line number of a given string. ive played with StringInStr, but that outputs (what i believe is) the position in # of characters from the beginning. so my question is bascially; how can i find the line number of a specified string in a .txt file? hope that makes sense, its a little late here Edited April 21, 2010 by hounder
99ojo Posted April 21, 2010 Posted April 21, 2010 Hi, have a look at _FileReadToArray (). Then perform an _ArraySearch () (!!set partitial search param!!) which gives you the line number. ;-)) Stefan
hounder Posted April 21, 2010 Author Posted April 21, 2010 Hi,have a look at _FileReadToArray (). Then perform an _ArraySearch () (!!set partitial search param!!) which gives you the line number.;-))Stefanworks perfectly!thanks a ton 99ojo
jchd Posted April 21, 2010 Posted April 21, 2010 BTW, the line number of the "source of a webpage" is irrelevant. The OP must be talking about an URL which isn't a webpage (not html). The extension given is irrelevant as well. This wonderful site allows debugging and testing regular expressions (many flavors available). An absolute must have in your bookmarks.Another excellent RegExp tutorial. Don't forget downloading your copy of up-to-date pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe hereRegExp tutorial: enough to get startedPCRE v8.33 regexp documentation latest available release and currently implemented in AutoIt beta. SQLitespeed is another feature-rich premier SQLite manager (includes import/export). Well worth a try.SQLite Expert (freeware Personal Edition or payware Pro version) is a very useful SQLite database manager.An excellent eBook covering almost every aspect of SQLite3: a must-read for anyone doing serious work.SQL tutorial (covers "generic" SQL, but most of it applies to SQLite as well)A work-in-progress SQLite3 tutorial. Don't miss other LxyzTHW pages!SQLite official website with full documentation (may be newer than the SQLite library that comes standard with AutoIt)
hounder Posted April 21, 2010 Author Posted April 21, 2010 BTW, the line number of the "source of a webpage" is irrelevant. The OP must be talking about an URL which isn't a webpage (not html). The extension given is irrelevant as well.eh, what?
jchd Posted April 21, 2010 Posted April 21, 2010 The (html) format of a webpage is commonly referred to as "source" and line numbers are irrelevant to html. So you must be referring to some .txt URL. Nothing important; if you're happy with what you have all is fine. This wonderful site allows debugging and testing regular expressions (many flavors available). An absolute must have in your bookmarks.Another excellent RegExp tutorial. Don't forget downloading your copy of up-to-date pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe hereRegExp tutorial: enough to get startedPCRE v8.33 regexp documentation latest available release and currently implemented in AutoIt beta. SQLitespeed is another feature-rich premier SQLite manager (includes import/export). Well worth a try.SQLite Expert (freeware Personal Edition or payware Pro version) is a very useful SQLite database manager.An excellent eBook covering almost every aspect of SQLite3: a must-read for anyone doing serious work.SQL tutorial (covers "generic" SQL, but most of it applies to SQLite as well)A work-in-progress SQLite3 tutorial. Don't miss other LxyzTHW pages!SQLite official website with full documentation (may be newer than the SQLite library that comes standard with AutoIt)
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