Hi - I tried to remove ^M in a delimited file using "tr -d "\r" and "sed 's/^M//g'", but it does not work quite well. While the ^M is removed, the format of the record is still cut in half, like
a,b, c
c,d,e
The delimited file is generated using sh script by outputing a SQL query result to... (7 Replies)
Hi Experts
I am very new to perl and need to make a script using perl.
I would like to remove blanks in a text tab delimited file in in a specfic column range ( colum 21 to column 43) sample input and output shown below :
Input:
117 102 650 652 654 656
117 93 95... (3 Replies)
Hey there - a bit of background on what I'm trying to accomplish, first off. I am trying to load the data from a pipe delimited file into a database. The loading tool that I use cannot handle embedded newline characters within a field, so I need to scrub them out.
Solutions that I have tried... (7 Replies)
I have a large flat file with variable length fields that are pipe delimited. The file has no new line or CR/LF characters to indicate a new record. I need to parse the file and after some number of fields, I need to insert a CR/LF to start the next record.
Input file ... (2 Replies)
Hi All
I wanted to know how to effectively delete some columns in a large tab delimited file.
I have a file that contains 5 columns and almost 100,000 rows
3456 f g t t
3456 g h
456 f h
4567 f g h z
345 f g
567 h j k lThis is a very large data file and tab delimited.
I need... (2 Replies)
Since there are approximately 75K gsfiles and hundreds of stfiles per gsfile, this script can take hours. How can I rewrite this script, so that it's much faster? I'm not as familiar with perl but I'm open to all suggestions.
ls file.list>$split
for gsfile in `cat $split`;
do
csplit... (17 Replies)
Hi,
I have the following command in place
nawk -F, '!a++' file > file.uniq
It has been working perfectly as per requirements, by removing duplicates by taking into consideration only first 3 fields. Recently it has started giving below error:
bash-3.2$ nawk -F, '!a++'... (17 Replies)
I am working on a homonym dictionary of names i.e. names which are clustered together according to their “sound-alike” pronunciation:
An example will make this clear:
Since the dictionary is manually constructed it often happens that inadvertently two sets of “homonyms” which should be grouped... (2 Replies)
I have a file size is around 24 G with 14 columns, delimiter with "|"
My requirement- can anyone provide me the fastest and best to get the below results
Number of records of the file
First column and second Column- Unique counts
Thanks for your time
Karti
------ Post updated at... (3 Replies)
I have a large file 1.5 gb and want to sort the file.
I used the following AWK script to do the job
!x++
The script works but it is very slow and takes over an hour to do the job. I suspect this is because the file is not sorted.
Any solution to speed up the AWk script or a Perl script would... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gimley
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mdbfontset
mdbFontset(5) The m17n Library mdbFontset(5)NAME
mdbFontset - Fontset
DESCRIPTION
The m17n library loads a fontset definition from the m17n database by the tags <fontset, FONTSET-NAME>. The plist format of the data is as
follows:
FONTSET ::= PER-SCRIPT * PER-CHARSET * FALLBACK *
PER-SCRIPT ::= '(' SCRIPT PER-LANGUAGE + ')'
PER-LANGUAGE ::= '(' LANGUAGE FONT-SPEC-ELEMENT + ')'
PER-CHARSET ::= '(' CHARSET FONT-SPEC-ELEMENT + ')'
FALLBACK ::= FONT-SPEC-ELEMENT
FONT-SPEC-ELEMENT ::= '(' FONT-SPEC [ FLT-NAME ] ')'
FONT-SPEC ::=
'(' [ FOUNDRY FAMILY
[ WEIGHT [ STYLE [ STRETCH [ ADSTYLE ]]]]]
REGISTRY
[ OTF-SPEC ] [ LANG-SPEC ] ')'
SCRIPT is a symbol of script name (e.g. latin, han) or nil. LANGUAGE is a two-letter symbol of language name code defined by ISO 639 (e.g.
ja, zh) or nil.
FONT-SPEC is to specify properties of a font. FOUNDRY to REGISTRY are symbols corresponding to Mfoundry to Mregistry property of a font.
See m17nFont for the meaning of each property.
OTF-SPEC is a symbol specifyng the required OTF features. The symbol name has the following syntax.
OTF-SPEC-NAME ::= ':otf=' SCRIPT LANGSYS ? GSUB-FEATURES ? GPOS-FEATURES ?
SCRIPT ::= SYMBOL
LANGSYS ::= '/' SYMBOL
GSUB-FEATURES ::= '=' FEATURE-LIST ?
GPOS-FEATURES ::= '+' FEATURE-LIST ?
FEATURE-LIST ::= '~' ? FEATURE ( ',' '~' ? FEATURE ',' )
Here, FEATURE is a four-letter Open Type feature.
LANG-SPEC is a symbol specifying the required language support. The symbol name has the following syntax.
LANG-SPEC-NAME ::= ':lang=' LANG
Here, LANG is a two or three-letter ISO-639 language code.
FLT-NAME is a name of Font Layout Table (Font Layout Table).
EXAMPLE
This is an example of PER_SCRIPT.
(han
(ja
((jisx0208.1983-0)))
(zh
((gb2312.1980-0)))
(nil
((big5-0))))
It instructs the font selector to use a font of registry 'jisx0208.1983-0' for a 'han' character (i.e. a character whose Mscript property
is 'han') if the character has Mlanguage text property 'ja' in an M-text and the character is in the repertories of such fonts. Otherwise,
try a font of registry 'gb2312.1980-0' or 'big5-0'. If that 'han' character does not have Mlanguage text property, try all three fonts.
See the function mdraw_text() for the detail of how a font is selected.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2001 Information-technology Promotion Agency (IPA)
Copyright (C) 2001-2011 National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html>.
Version 1.6.2 12 Jan 2011 mdbFontset(5)