How do I find the files containing some text.
eg. I want to find alll the files that contain the word 'hello'
grep hello * will give me only for the specific directory.
How do I find for entire system.
Thanks for help in advance.. (5 Replies)
Hello experts,
can you kindly tell me how I can look for a file in unix whose name may contain upper or lowercase letters? E.g. If I know the file contains the name netcool but unsure if its NETCOOL or netcool?
Thanks :) (3 Replies)
Hi.
I would like to have experts help on below action.
I have text files in which page nubmers exists in form like
PAGE : 1
PAGE : 2
PAGE : 3 and so on there is other text too. I would like to know is it possible to check the last occurance of Page... (6 Replies)
I'm having a problem how to find the specific word in a file without using the word itself as a search but using the assigned variable which is the $passwd.. what command should I use to find the value of $passwd written in different script? how do I use the command to print the value in this... (7 Replies)
Here's the nonfunctional code I have so far
#!/bin/bash
searchFor=(`cat filea.txt` )
replaceWith=(`cat fileb.txt`)
myMax=${#searchFor}
myCounter=1
while ;
do sed -i 's/${$searchFor}/${$replaceWith}/g'
done
The goal is to use each line in filea.txt as a search term, and each line... (2 Replies)
Im trying to use wild cards to find files that start with either an upper or lower case letter e.g. list files that beginning with b or B, i also want to sort them by the time they were last modified. e.g latest file created first.
At the moment i have the following code that
ls -d... (3 Replies)
I've been using this to search an entire directory recursively for a specific phrase in my code (html, css, php, javascript, etc.):
find dir_name -type f -exec grep -l "phrase" {} \;
The problem is that it searches ALL files in the directory 'dir_name', even binary ones such as large JPEG... (2 Replies)
In the attached files, I am trying to use import.txt to find what is missing in all.txt and print the missing lines in missing.txt. I used SQL to import a list into a database and got errors and need to figure out what didn't import correctly. The below script is close, I think, but doesn't... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
lookbib
lookbib(1) User Commands lookbib(1)NAME
lookbib - find references in a bibliographic database
SYNOPSIS
lookbib database
DESCRIPTION
A bibliographic reference is a set of lines, constituting fields of bibliographic information. Each field starts on a line beginning with
a `%', followed by a key-letter, then a blank, and finally the contents of the field, which may continue until the next line starting with
`%'.
The lookbib utility uses an inverted index made by indxbib to find sets of bibliographic references. It reads keywords typed after the `>'
prompt on the terminal, and retrieves records containing all these keywords. If nothing matches, nothing is returned except another `>'
prompt.
It is possible to search multiple databases, as long as they have a common index made by indxbib(1). In that case, only the first argument
given to indxbib is specified to lookbib.
If lookbib does not find the index files (the .i[abc] files), it looks for a reference file with the same name as the argument, without the
suffixes. It creates a file with a .ig suffix, suitable for use with fgrep (see grep(1)). lookbib then uses this fgrep file to find refer-
ences. This method is simpler to use, but the .ig file is slower to use than the .i[abc] files, and does not allow the use of multiple
reference files.
FILES
x.ia
x.ib
x.ic index files
x.ig reference file
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWdoc |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO addbib(1), grep(1), indxbib(1), refer(1), roffbib(1), sortbib(1), attributes(5)BUGS
Probably all dates should be indexed, since many disciplines refer to literature written in the 1800s or earlier.
SunOS 5.10 14 Sep 1992 lookbib(1)