Index
   
  
  
   
    Subject
   
   : [lug] Digest (8 messages)
  
  
   
    From
   
   : lug-owner@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  
   
    Date
   
   : Sun, 16 Apr 2017 22:58:17 -0400
  
  
  The Lug Digest
  
  Volume 1 : Issue 406 : "text" Format
  
  
  Messages in this Issue:
  
  201704/1  : Tuesday 4/4 Social Dinner
  
  Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  201704/2  : Tonight's meeting location
  
  Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  201704/3  : Tuesday Hack Night
  
  Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  201704/4  : 2017 SouthEast LinuxFest
  
  "George P. Burdell" <info+lug@southeastlinuxfest.[redacted]>
  
  201704/5  : LUG / ACM Event Tomorrow
  
  Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  201704/6  : Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Jeffery Mewtamer <mewtamer@gmail.[redacted]>
  
  201704/7  : Re: Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  201704/8  : Re: Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Jim Turner <jdturne8@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Mon, 3 Apr 2017 00:17:27 -0400
  
  From: Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Tuesday 4/4 Social Dinner
  
  Message-ID: <dcf1ce58-0cba-9893-c731-6ab5368c0ce3@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi LUG-
  
  
  The poll for this week's social meeting is up at:
  
  https://forum.lug.ncsu.edu/t/tuesday-4-4-social-dinner/84
  
  
  Vote if you're coming and come if you vote!
  
  
  Be on the lookout for a longer announcement email later this week.
  
  
  /* (C) POTLUG 2017
  
  * This file is part of POTLUG Weekly Digest.
  
  *
  
  * POTLUG Weekly Digest is free email; you can redistribute it and/or
  
  modify
  
  * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
  
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  *
  
  * POTLUG Weekly Digest is distributed in the hope that it will be
  
  useful, but
  
  * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  
  * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
  
  * General Public License for more details.
  
  *
  
  * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  
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  write to the
  
  * Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
  
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  */
  
  
  Quentin
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2017 18:14:26 -0400
  
  From: Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Tonight's meeting location
  
  Message-ID: <CANhSzx3VYf5Cv7shTGEX6fB+hMonuEX48S-R2DwRi4DmSvmt-A@mail.gmail.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi LUG-
  
  
  Sorry for the late notice. Tonight's meeting will be at I <3 NY PIZZA!
  
  Hooray!
  
  
  I <3 NY PIZZA is on Hillsborough St. near NCSU campus.
  
  
  Best,
  
  --
  
  Quentin Young
  
  President, LUG @ NC State
  
  
  
  [Attachment of type text/html removed.]
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Sun, 9 Apr 2017 18:47:23 -0400
  
  From: Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Tuesday Hack Night
  
  Message-ID: <f2d8a8d8-9d54-b292-d8a4-3c3f041b2603@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi LUG,
  
  
  Last week a grad student was kind enough to donate one of his 1U HP
  
  Proliant DL360 G5 servers to us. This unit has 64gb of DDR2 memory and
  
  two Xeons for a total of 8 physical cores -- in other words, it
  
  out-specs both of our current units. However it didn't come with any
  
  disks, so the LUG has picked up 3x1TB drives to toss in the drive bays.
  
  We'll be doing that and imaging it with our favorite flavor of Linux
  
  this Tuesday night, so anyone who wants to learn about server hardware,
  
  installing Linux, RAID configuration, and other sysadmin-y tasks is
  
  welcomed to join us. Should be a fun meeting.
  
  
  Time and place as usual, 7:00 P.M. @ EB2 3001.
  
  
  Oh, and if anyone has M3 screws for mounting the drives into the drive
  
  caddies and feels like sharing, bring 'em! I have some on the way from
  
  Amazon but they're slated for delivery Tuesday, which usually means 7:30
  
  Tuesday night...
  
  
  Best,
  
  
  --
  
  Quentin Young
  
  President, LUG @ NC State
  
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Mon, 10 Apr 2017 14:35:55 -0400
  
  From: "George P. Burdell" <info+lug@southeastlinuxfest.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: 2017 SouthEast LinuxFest
  
  Message-ID: <CACsMxkdoHrCAqTq5p7Ygf+hGZrhc_TyG_R5ia5XFSFBFtEGonQ@mail.gmail.[redacted]>
  
  
  Talk submissions for SELF 2017 closes THIS FRIDAY at 11:59 PM ET.   We are
  
  always looking for talk submissions on a very wide variety of topics.   As
  
  long as it is geeky and not proprietary ... we're interested!  We even had
  
  a talk last year on hardware computers used on WWI Battleships.   So if
  
  you're passionate about something -- from programming languages to
  
  development to administration to design to something straight out of
  
  /dev/random -- submit a talk!    If you're selected as a speaker at SELF,
  
  we'll treat you to a proper Carolina style BBQ dinner as well as an
  
  unfathomable list of wine, distillates, and microbrews from all over the
  
  South.   So what are you waiting for?  Submit your talk now:
  
  http://www.southeastlinuxfest.org/?page_id=18
  
  
  --
  
  George P. Burdell
  
  SouthEast LinuxFest
  
  
  http://www.southeastlinuxfest.org
  
  @selinuxfest
  
  fb.com/selinuxfest
  
  
  
  [Attachment of type text/html removed.]
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2017 23:14:45 -0400
  
  From: Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: LUG / ACM Event Tomorrow
  
  Message-ID: <60888d3b-0e5c-660d-16b4-5761b51093d4@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi LUG,
  
  
  As featured in Ken Tate's most recent CSC news, a joint event between
  
  our club and the Association for Computing Machinery will take place
  
  tomorrow from 6 to 7 P.M. in 1231 EB2. A SWE from Red Hat will be
  
  delivering a talk on Docker and LXC (LinuX Containers). Food and drink
  
  will be provided courtesy of ACM + LUG.
  
  
  I know many of you will be attending TriLUG's meeting tomorrow; those of
  
  you who are not, I look forward to seeing you at the event.
  
  
  Best,
  
  
  --
  
  Quentin Young
  
  President, LUG @ NC State
  
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2017 00:17:15 +0000
  
  From: Jeffery Mewtamer <mewtamer@gmail.[redacted]>
  
  To: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@redhat.[redacted]>,
  
  lug <lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]>, raspberry-vi@freelists.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Message-ID: <CAO2sX336r3GQ6aH4Qh8u5CFyC_m9XazTWos7VVtBCkiPwcGK1g@mail.gmail.[redacted]>
  
  
  I often convert various document formats to plain text because the
  
  conversion is generally easier than trying to navigate a program that
  
  can read the document in its original format. Problem is, even when
  
  the document is in English or another language that uses the Roman
  
  Alphabet, the converted .txt contains characters my text-mode screen
  
  reader can't read properly(pronouncing the character as "thorn")
  
  
  Things like left and right double curly quotes and single right curly
  
  quotes are the most common offenders, which also screws up my screen
  
  reader's pronunciation of contractions and possessive, though things
  
  like ellipsis, em-dashes, and accented letters also cause problems.
  
  
  Most of these problems can be fixed manually, though it means I often
  
  spend as much time correcting the file as I do reading it.
  
  
  I know how to use sed to do global search and replace on plain text
  
  files, at least where both the string to be found and the string it's
  
  to be replaced with can be typed, but most of the replacements I'd
  
  like to make have search strings containing characters not on my
  
  keyboard.
  
  
  So, how do I tell sed to replace a left double curly quote with a
  
  straight double quote, an ellipsis with three periods, or an e with an
  
  acute accent with a normal e among other such things? And if this is
  
  beyond sed's capabilities, could someone suggest another command line
  
  tool that can automate this task?
  
  
  --
  
  Sincerely,
  
  
  Jeffery Wright
  
  Bachelor of Computer Science
  
  President Emeritus, Nu Nu Chapter, Phi Theta Kappa.
  
  Former Secretary, Student Government Association, College of the Albemarle.
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Sun, 16 Apr 2017 20:58:33 -0400
  
  From: Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Re: Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Message-ID: <5ac3210f-acc0-faae-4559-19bd1b4ed5ab@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi Jeffery,
  
  
  I think GNU's recode tool is probably your best bet here. I experimented with
  
  Unicode left and right double quotes (U+201D and U+201C) in a UTF-8 encoded
  
  text file and ran the following command:
  
  
  $ recode UTF-8..ISO-8859-15 file.txt
  
  
  It converted each of the double quotes down to an ASCII double quote, so it
  
  seems to have some smarts built in.  Do note that it overwrites the file given
  
  to it.
  
  
  On 04/16/2017 08:17 PM, Jeffery Mewtamer wrote:
  
  
  > I often convert various document formats to plain text because the
  
  > conversion is generally easier than trying to navigate a program that
  
  > can read the document in its original format. Problem is, even when
  
  > the document is in English or another language that uses the Roman
  
  > Alphabet, the converted .txt contains characters my text-mode screen
  
  > reader can't read properly(pronouncing the character as "thorn")
  
  >
  
  > Things like left and right double curly quotes and single right curly
  
  > quotes are the most common offenders, which also screws up my screen
  
  > reader's pronunciation of contractions and possessive, though things
  
  > like ellipsis, em-dashes, and accented letters also cause problems.
  
  >
  
  > Most of these problems can be fixed manually, though it means I often
  
  > spend as much time correcting the file as I do reading it.
  
  >
  
  > I know how to use sed to do global search and replace on plain text
  
  > files, at least where both the string to be found and the string it's
  
  > to be replaced with can be typed, but most of the replacements I'd
  
  > like to make have search strings containing characters not on my
  
  > keyboard.
  
  >
  
  > So, how do I tell sed to replace a left double curly quote with a
  
  > straight double quote, an ellipsis with three periods, or an e with an
  
  > acute accent with a normal e among other such things? And if this is
  
  > beyond sed's capabilities, could someone suggest another command line
  
  > tool that can automate this task?
  
  >
  
  >
  
  Best,
  
  --
  
  Quentin Young
  
  President, LUG @ NC State
  
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  Date: Sun, 16 Apr 2017 22:58:13 -0400
  
  From: Jim Turner <jdturne8@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  To: lug@lists.ncsu.[redacted]
  
  Subject: Re: Using sed to straighten quotes.
  
  Message-ID: <874lxn3flm.fsf@turner.[redacted]>
  
  
  Hi Jeffery,
  
  
  Also try the iconv tool. I tested it with an ellipsis, curly quotes, and
  
  an accented 'e', and it turned them into three dots, ASCII quotes, and
  
  an ASCII 'e', respectively. Characters that it can't transliterate are
  
  turned into question marks. You can run it like this:
  
  
  $ iconv -t ASCII//TRANSLIT original.txt -o output.txt
  
  
  Jim
  
  
  On Mon, 17 Apr 2017, at 00:58:33+0000, Quentin Young <qlyoung@ncsu.[redacted]>
  
  wrote:
  
  
  > Hi Jeffery,
  
  >
  
  > I think GNU's recode tool is probably your best bet here. I
  
  > experimented with
  
  > Unicode left and right double quotes (U+201D and U+201C) in a UTF-8
  
  > encoded
  
  > text file and ran the following command:
  
  >
  
  > $ recode UTF-8..ISO-8859-15 file.txt
  
  >
  
  > It converted each of the double quotes down to an ASCII double quote,
  
  > so it
  
  > seems to have some smarts built in.  Do note that it overwrites the
  
  > file given
  
  > to it.
  
  >
  
  > On 04/16/2017 08:17 PM, Jeffery Mewtamer wrote:
  
  >
  
  >> I often convert various document formats to plain text because the
  
  >> conversion is generally easier than trying to navigate a program that
  
  >> can read the document in its original format. Problem is, even when
  
  >> the document is in English or another language that uses the Roman
  
  >> Alphabet, the converted .txt contains characters my text-mode screen
  
  >> reader can't read properly(pronouncing the character as "thorn")
  
  >>
  
  >> Things like left and right double curly quotes and single right curly
  
  >> quotes are the most common offenders, which also screws up my screen
  
  >> reader's pronunciation of contractions and possessive, though things
  
  >> like ellipsis, em-dashes, and accented letters also cause problems.
  
  >>
  
  >> Most of these problems can be fixed manually, though it means I often
  
  >> spend as much time correcting the file as I do reading it.
  
  >>
  
  >> I know how to use sed to do global search and replace on plain text
  
  >> files, at least where both the string to be found and the string it's
  
  >> to be replaced with can be typed, but most of the replacements I'd
  
  >> like to make have search strings containing characters not on my
  
  >> keyboard.
  
  >>
  
  >> So, how do I tell sed to replace a left double curly quote with a
  
  >> straight double quote, an ellipsis with three periods, or an e with
  
  >> an
  
  >> acute accent with a normal e among other such things? And if this is
  
  >> beyond sed's capabilities, could someone suggest another command line
  
  >> tool that can automate this task?
  
  >>
  
  >>
  
  > Best,
  
  
  
  ------------------------------
  
  
  End of [lug] Digest (8 messages)
  
  **********