Hi,
As per my requirement, I need to take difference between two big files(around 6.5 GB) and get the difference to a output file without any line numbers or '<' or '>' in front of each new line.
As DIFF command wont work for big files, i tried to use BDIFF instead.
I am getting incorrect... (13 Replies)
IBM RS6000 F50
AIX 4.3.2
i am having trouble in calculating the actual size of a set of directories and reconciling the results with the actual Hard Disk space used
I have 33GB disk which is showing 7.8GB used, a byte count of the files in the directory/sub-dirs i`m interested in is 48GB,... (4 Replies)
On my Linux system there seems to be a massive difference between the value of _POSIX_OPEN_MAX and what sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) returns and also what I'd expect from the table of examples of configuration limits from Advanced Programming In The UNIX Environment, 2nd Ed.
_POSIX_OPEN_MAX: 16... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to awk and trying to count the difference between the first columns of two CSV files.
--------
Sample input (header is:name, id1,id2):
file1.csv
name, id1,id2
sss,34,56
yyy,3,56
www,56,78
pppp,43,12
file2.csv
name,id1,id2
sss,32,56
yyy,12,7
ttt,4,8
uuu,7,9 (0 Replies)
I have two csv files having 90K records each & each row has around 50 columns.Lets say the file names are FILE1 and FILE2. I have to compare both the files and generate a new file that has rows from FILE2 if it differs.
FILE1
-----
2001,"John",25,19901130,21211.41,Unix Forum... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have about 10 csv files which range from csv1 - csv10.
Each csv file has same type/set of tabs and we have around 5-6 tabs for each of the csv file which have slightly different content(data).
A sample of CSV1 is shown below:
Joins: Data related to Joins, it can be any number of... (2 Replies)
I am having two csv files i need to compare these files and the output file should have the information of the differences at the field level.
For Example,
File 1:
A,B,C,D,E,F
1,2,3,4,5,6
File 2:
A,C,B,D,E,F
1,2,4,5,5,6
out put file: (12 Replies)
(say) I have 2 csv files - file1.csv & file2.csv as mentioned below:
file1.csv
ID,version,cost
1000,1,30
2000,2,40
3000,3,50
4000,4,60
file2.csv
ID,version,cost
1000,1,30
2000,2,45
3000,4,55
6000,5,70
The... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Naresh101
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
paste
paste(1) General Commands Manual paste(1)Name
paste - merge file data
Syntax
paste file1 file2...
paste -dlist file1 file2...
paste -s [-dlist] file1 file2...
Description
In the first two forms, concatenates corresponding lines of the given input files file1, file2, etc. It treats each file as a column or
columns of a table and pastes them together horizontally (parallel merging).
In the last form, the command combines subsequent lines of the input file (serial merging).
In all cases, lines are glued together with the tab character, or with characters from an optionally specified list. Output is to the
standard output, so it can be used as the start of a pipe, or as a filter, if - is used in place of a file name.
Options
- Used in place of any file name, to read a line from the standard input. (There is no prompting).
-dlist Replaces characters of all but last file with nontabs characters (default tab). One or more characters immediately following -d
replace the default tab as the line concatenation character. The list is used circularly, i. e. when exhausted, it is reused. In
parallel merging (i. e. no -s option), the lines from the last file are always terminated with a new-line character, not from the
list. The list may contain the special escape sequences:
(new-line), (tab), \ (backslash), and (empty string, not a null
character). Quoting may be necessary, if characters have special meaning to the shell (for example, to get one backslash, use
-d"\\" ).
Without this option, the new-line characters of each but the last file (or last line in case of the -s option) are replaced by a
tab character. This option allows replacing the tab character by one or more alternate characters (see below).
-s Merges subsequent lines rather than one from each input file. Use tab for concatenation, unless a list is specified with -d
option. Regardless of the list, the very last character of the file is forced to be a new-line.
Examples
ls | paste -d" " -
list directory in one column
ls | paste - - - -
list directory in four columns
paste -s -d"
" file
combine pairs of lines into lines
Diagnostics
line too long
Output lines are restricted to 511 characters.
too many files
Except for -s option, no more than 12 input files may be specified.
See Alsocut(1), grep(1), pr(1)paste(1)