Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Sorting rows to columns
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Sorting rows to columns Post 302779705 by RudiC on Wednesday 13th of March 2013 08:56:35 AM
Old 03-13-2013
pamu's proposal works fine if there's always four digit numbers. Should that change, and should "GO" stay the substring where to split the line,try:
Code:
$ awk '{gsub (/GO/, FS"GO");for (i=2; i<=NF; i++) print $1, $i}' file
AT4560 GO:1289
AT4560 GO:8915
etc...

This User Gave Thanks to RudiC For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sorting based on columns

Hi, I want a list of entries in 3 space delimited columns. I want to sort entries based on the very first column. Rows can't be changed. For example: If I have... Abc Abc Acc Bca Bda Bdd Cab Cab Cbc Dbc Dca Dda Abc Abc Acc the output should be... Abc Abc Acc Abc Abc Acc Bca... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: MobileUser
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

sorting of varchar columns

Hi , I need to sort a file based on multiple columns All the columns are of varchar type can any one give me the command to sort for varchar columns? Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: laxmi131
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Vertical sorting of columns

Please help to sort columns in this file: a b d f c e 1 4 10 16 7 13 2 5 11 17 8 14 3 6 12 18 9 15 I need to sort COLUMNS (so sort command doesn't work) like this: a b c d e f 1 4 7 10 13 16 2 5 8 11 14 17 3 6 9 12 15 18 I know sed can do it but don't know how... :( (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: coppuca
7 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

sorting and adding columns

i have a file with two columns, and i want to uniquely sort the values in fist column and add the corresponding values in the second columns eg file a contents tom 200 john 300 sow 500 tom 800 james 50 sow 300 output shpould be in file b as tom 1000 john 300 sow 800 james 50 (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dealerso
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help in sorting multiple columns

Hello all, I am using printf to print the sorted o/p in my script.I am trying to sort in following way but doesn't work. printf "%13s %2s UDP %15s:%s Program %4s HD: %23s HD: %23s %10s %s %s %3s days %3s hours\n" $encoder $i "${ipaddr}" ${portno} ${progno} ${inres} ${outres} ${inrate}... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramman
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Kindly Help regarding sorting a file rows

Dear All, I have a file name exporting.txt. Below is the content. $ cat exporting.txt . . exporting table DT_BCD 63716 rows exported . . exporting table DT_CVD 36321 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sudiptabhaskar
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Deleting all the fields(columns) from a .csv file if all rows in that columns are blanks

Hi Friends, I have come across some files where some of the columns don not have data. Key, Data1,Data2,Data3,Data4,Data5 A,5,6,,10,, A,3,4,,3,, B,1,,4,5,, B,2,,3,4,, If we see the above data on Data5 column do not have any row got filled. So remove only that column(Here Data5) and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ks_reddy
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Evaluate 2 columns, add sum IF two columns match on two rows

Hi all, I know this sounds suspiciously like a homework course; but, it is not. My goal is to take a file, and match my "ID" column to the "Date" column, if those conditions are true, add the total number of minutes worked and place it in this file, while not printing the original rows that I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: mtucker6784
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sorting by columns

Hi, I have a tab delimited columnar file where I want to remove lines wherever two particular columns match. so for this file, I want to toss the lines where columns 1 and 2 match: a a 1 3 a b 2 4 b b 3 5 because there are matches column 1 and 2 in lines 1 and 3, I would like a script to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mikey11415
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare 2 csv files by columns, then extract certain columns of matcing rows

Hi all, I'm pretty much a newbie to UNIX. I would appreciate any help with UNIX coding on comparing two large csv files (greater than 10 GB in size), and output a file with matching columns. I want to compare file1 and file2 by 'id' and 'chain' columns, then extract exact matching rows'... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bkane3
5 Replies
textutil(n)						      Texts and strings utils						       textutil(n)

NAME
textutil - Procedures to manipulate texts and strings. SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.2 package require textutil ?0.5? textutil::adjust string args textutil::splitx string ?regexp? textutil::tabify string ?num? textutil::tabify2 string ?num? textutil::trim string ?regexp? textutil::trimleft string ?regexp? textutil::trimright string ?regexp? textutil::untabify string ?num? textutil::untabify2 string ?num? textutil::strRepeat text num DESCRIPTION
The textutil package provides commands that manipulate strings or texts (a.k.a. long strings or string with embedded newlines or para- graphs). The complete set of procedures is described below. textutil::adjust string args Do a justification on the string according to args. The string is taken as one big paragraph, ignoring any newlines. Then the line is formatted according to the options used, and the command return a new string with enough lines to contain all the printable chars in the input string. A line is a set of chars between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between 2 newlines, or between a newline and the end of the string. If the input string is small enough, the returned string won't contain any newlines. By default, any occurrence of spaces characters or tabulation are replaced by a single space so each word in a line is separated from the next one by exactly one space char, and this forms a real line. Each real line is placed in a logical line, which have exactly a given length (see -length option below). The real line may have a lesser length. Again by default, any trailing spaces are ignored before returning the string (see -full option below). The following options may be used after the string parameter, and change the way the command place a real line in a logical line. -full boolean If set to false, any trailing space chars are deleted before returning the string. If set to true, any trailing space chars are left in the string. Default to false. -justify (center|left|plain|right) Set the justification of the returned string to center, left, plain or right. By default, it is set to left. The justifica- tion means that any line in the returned string but the last one is build according to the value. If the justification is set to plain and the number of printable chars in the last line is less than 90% of the length of a line (see -length), then this line is justified with the left value, avoiding the expansion of this line when it is too small. The meaning of each value is: center The real line is centered in the logical line. If needed, a set of space char are added at the beginning (half of the needed set) and at the end (half of the needed set) of the line if required (see the option -full). left The real line is set on the left of the logical line. It means that there are no space chars at the beginning of this line. If required, all needed space chars are added at the end of the line (see the option -full). plain The real line is exactly set in the logical line. It means that there are no leading or trailing space chars. All the needed space chars are added in the real line, between 2 (or more) words. right The real line is set on the right of the logical line. It means that there are no space chars at the end of this line, and there may be some space chars at the beginning, despite of the -full option. -length integer Set the length of the logical line in the string to integer. integer must be a positive integer value. Defaults to 72. -strictlength boolean If set to false, a line can exceed the specified -length if a single word is longer than -length. If set to true, words that are longer than -length are split so that no line exceeds the specified -length. Defaults to false. textutil::splitx string ?regexp? Split the string and return a list. The string is split according to the regular expression regexp instead of a simple list of chars. Note that if you add parenthesis into the regexp, the parentheses part of separator would be added into list as additional element. If the string is empty the result is the empty list, like for split. If regexp is empty the string is split at every char- acter, like split does. The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ ]+". textutil::tabify string ?num?] Tabify the string by replacing any substring of num space chars by a tabulation and return the result as a new string. num defaults to 8. textutil::tabify2 string ?num?] Similar to textutil::tabify this command tabifies the string and returns the result as a new string. A different algorithm is used however. Instead of replacing any substring of num spaces this comand works more like an editor. num defaults to 8. Each line of the text in string is treated as if there are tabstops every num columns. Only sequences of space characters containing more than one space character and found immediately before a tabstop are replaced with tabs. textutil::trim string ?regexp?] Remove in string any leading and trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new string. This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the string. The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ ]+". textutil::trimleft string ?regexp?] Remove in string any leading substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new string. This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the string. The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ ]+". textutil::trimright string ?regexp?] Remove in string any trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new string. This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the string. The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ ]+". textutil::untabify string ?num?] Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by a substring of num space chars and return the result as a new string. num defaults to 8. textutil::untabify2 string ?num?] Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by a substring of at most num space chars and return the result as a new string. Unlike textutil::untabify each tab is not replaced by a fixed number of space characters. The command overlays each line in the string with tabstops every num columns instead and replaces tabs with just enough space characters to reach the next tabstop. This is the complement of the actions taken by textutil::tabify2. num defaults to 8. There is one asymmetry though: A tab can be replaced with a single space, but not the other way around. textutil::strRepeat text num The implementation depends on the core executing the package. Used string repeat if it is present, or a fast tcl implementation if it is not. Returns a string containing the text repeated num times. The repetitions are joined without characters between them. A value of num <= 0 causes the command to return an empty string. SEE ALSO
regexp(n), split(n), string(n) KEYWORDS
string, regular expression textutil 0.5 textutil(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:40 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy