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The search service can find package by either name (apache), provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache), binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) in standard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet...
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Spreadsheet::ReadSXC extracts data from OpenOffice 1.x spreadsheet files (.sxc). It exports the function read_sxc() which takes a filename and an optional reference to a hash of options as arguments and returns a reference to a hash of references to two-dimensional arrays. The hash keys correspond to the names of worksheets in the OpenOffice workbook. The two-dimensional arrays correspond to rows and cells in the respective spreadsheets. If you don't like this because the order of sheets is not preserved in a hash, read on. The 'OrderBySheet' option provides an array of hashes instead. If you prefer to unpack the .sxc file yourself, you can use the function read_xml_file() instead and pass the path to content.xml as an argument. Or you can extract the XML string from content.xml and pass the string to the function read_xml_string(). Both functions also take a reference to a hash of options as an optional second argument. Spreadsheet::ReadSXC requires XML::Parser to parse the XML contained in .sxc files. Only the contents of text:p elements are returned, not the actual values of table:value attributes. For example, a cell might have a table:value-type attribute of "currency", a table:value attribute of "-1500.99" and a table:currency attribute of "USD". The text:p element would contain "-$1,500.99". This is the string which is returned by the read_sxc() function, not the value of -1500.99.
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