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Full Discussion: Special characters
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Special characters Post 302396568 by sid1982 on Thursday 18th of February 2010 08:35:52 PM
Old 02-18-2010
Special characters

When I open a file in vi, I see the following characters:

\302\240

Can someone explain what these characters mean. Is it ASCII format? I need to trim those characters from a file.

I am doing the following:

tr -d '\302\240'

---------- Post updated at 08:35 PM ---------- Previous update was at 08:18 PM ----------

I got it. It is an octal representation of "Â*" (not including double quotes)

What is the best ways to remove this octal character from a file?
 

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uuencode(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						       uuencode(4)

NAME
uuencode - format of an encoded uuencode file DESCRIPTION
Files output by consist of a header line followed by a number of body lines, and a trailer line. The command ignores any lines preceding the header or following the trailer (see uuencode(1)). Lines preceding a header must not look like a header. The header line consists of the word followed by a space, a mode (in octal), another space, and a string which specifies the name of the remote file. The body consists of a number of lines, each containing 62 or fewer characters (including trailing new-line). These lines consist of a character count, followed by encoded characters, followed by a newline. The character count is a single printing character, which represents an integer. This integer is the number of bytes in the rest of the line, and always ranges from 0 to 63. The byte count can be determined by subtracting the equivalent octal value of an ASCII space charac- ter (octal 40) from the character. Groups of 3 bytes are stored in 4 characters, 6 bits per character. All are offset by a space to make the characters printable. The last line may be shorter than the normal 45 bytes. If the size is not a multiple of 3, this fact can be determined by the value of the count on the last line. Extra meaningless data will be included, if necessary, to make the character count a multiple of 4. The body is terminated by a line with a count of zero. This line consists of one ASCII space. The trailer line consists of the word on a line by itself. SEE ALSO
mail(1), uuencode(1), uucp(1). uuencode(4)
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