Hi, s/\n.* / :: /p means replace everything in the line buffer between the first linefeed and the last space with " :: " and print the result.
So for the first match the line buffer will contain the following after the 3 N-operations:
so \nPKG= P8SDB disks: \n-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------\n/dev/rdisk/disk7777 xx 00 00 xxxx 07:67 xxxx
will get replaced.. (\n is representation of the linefeed in this example)
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 01-31-2013 at 07:32 PM..
First, thanks for the help in previous posts... couldn't have gotten where I am now without it!
So here is what I have, I use AWK to match $1 and $2 as 1 string in file1 to $1 and $2 as 1 string in file2. Now I'm wondering if I can extend this AWK command to incorporate the following:
If $1... (4 Replies)
Hi all!
I have a data set in this tab separated format : Label, Value1, Value2
An instance is "data.txt" :
0 1 1
-1 2 3
0 2 2
I would like to parse this data set and generate two files, one that has only data with the label 0 and the other with label -1, so my outputs should be, for... (1 Reply)
Hello:
I am working parsing a large input file which will be broken down into multiples based on the second field in the file, in this case: STORE.
The idea is to create each file with the corresponding store number, for example: Report_$STORENUM_$DATETIMESTAMP , and obtaining the... (7 Replies)
i run command that return this result,example :
gigabitethernet2/2/4:NotPresent, gigabitethernet2/1/17:UP, gigabitethernet2/1/10:UP, gigabitethernet2/1/5:UP,
gigabitethernet2/1/9:UP, gigabitethernet2/1/36:DOWN, gigabitethernet2/1/33:DOWN, gigabitethernet2/1/8:UP,... (19 Replies)
I am trying to parse the input in awk to include the |gc= in $4 but am not able to. The below is close:
awk so far:
awk '{sub(/\|]+]++/, ""); print }' input.txt Input
chr1 955543 955763 AGRN-6|pr=2|gc=75 0 +
chr1 957571 957852 AGRN-7|pr=3|gc=61.2 0 +
chr1 970621 ... (7 Replies)
I am trying to look for $2 of file1 (skipping the header) in $2 of file2 (skipping the header) and if they match and the value in $10 is > 30 and $11 is > 49, then print the line from file1 to a output file. If no match is foung the line is not printed. Both the input and output are tab-delimited.... (3 Replies)
Hi Team,
Could you please help me with the below scenario.
I have a file which is in the below format.
Zipcode,001,001f,002,002f,003,003f,004,004f,005,005f,006,006f,007,007f
0050, ,0, ,0, ,0, ,1,*,7, ,7, ,7
0060, ,0, ,0, ,7, ,0,*,7, ,0, ,0
Would need the output as below.
First field... (1 Reply)
Hi,
So awk is driving me crazy on this one. I have searched everywhere and read man, docs and every related post Google can find and still no luck. The actual files I need to run this on are sensitive in nature, but it is the same thing as if I needed to calculate weighted grades for multiple... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: cotilloe
15 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
unicode_start
UNICODE_START(1) General Commands Manual UNICODE_START(1)NAME
unicode_start - put keyboard and console in unicode mode
SYNOPSIS
unicode_start [font [umap]]
DESCRIPTION
The unicode_start command will put the keyboard and console into Unicode (UTF-8) mode.
For the keyboard this means that one can attach 16-bit U+xxxx values to keyboard keys using loadkeys(1), and have these appear as UTF-8
input to user programs. Also, that one can type hexadecimal Alt-xxxx using the numeric keypad, and again produce UTF-8.
For the console this means that the kernel expects UTF-8 output from user programs, and displays the output accordingly.
The parameter font is a font that is loaded. It should have a built-in Unicode map, or, if it hasn't, such a map can be given explicitly as
second parameter. When no font was specified, the current font is kept.
NOTE
Unicode mode is a parameter with a value per virtual console. However, usually the font and keymap is common to all consoles.
SEE ALSO dumpkeys(1), kbd_mode(1), loadkeys(1), unicode_stop(1), utf-8(7), setfont(8)
3 Feb 2001 UNICODE_START(1)