I am not sure whether u want the total count or the count of 'A', 'E', 'I', 'O' and 'U' separately.
However the one-liner that I have given will give separate counts.
First, the command
will convert the contents of 1.txt to capital letters. Then, the command
will tokenize the contents of the file to give only vowels.
On this output you are sorting so that you could use the uniq command on it. uniq -c will precede each output line with the count of the number of times the line occurred in the input.
I have a file with a list of config files numbered on the lefthand side 1-300. I need to have bash read each lines number and assign it to a variable so it can be chosen by the user called by the script later.
Ex. 1 some data
2 something else
3 more stuff
which number do you... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to write a programme which scans strings to find how many vowels they contain. I get an error saying that I'm trying to compare a pointer and an integer inif(*v == scanme){. How can I overcome this ? Also, the programme seems to scan only the first word of a string e.g.: if I type "abc... (1 Reply)
Dear Perl users,
I need your help to solve my problem below.
I want to print the sequence number without missing number within the range.
E.g. my sequence number :
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 11 12 13 14
my desired output:
1 -8 , 11-14
my code below but still problem with the result:
1 - 14
1 -... (2 Replies)
I would like to print the number of records of 2 files, and divide the two numbers
awk '{print NR}' file1 > output1
awk '{print NR}' file2 > output2
paste output1 output2 > output
awl '{print $1/$2}' output > output_2
is there a faster way? (8 Replies)
Hi Power User,
I'm trying to compute this kind of text file format:
file1:
jakarta 100 150
jakarta 170 210
beijing 220 250
beijing 260 280
beijing 290 320
new_york 330 350
new_york 370 420
tokyo 430 470
tokyo 480 ... (2 Replies)
Hi!
I was trying to grep all the words in a wordlist, (twl), with no vowels. I had a hard time figuring out how to do it, but I finally lit on the -v flag. Here's my question:
Why does this work:
grep -v '' twl
But this doesn't:
grep '' twl
In the second example, we're asking for lines... (6 Replies)
Hi
I want to use awk to match where field 3 contains a number within string - then print the line and just the number as a new field.
The source file is pipe delimited and looks something like
1|net|ABC Letr1|1530|||
1|net|EXP_1040 ABC|1121|||
1|net|EXP_TG1224|1122|||
1|net|R_North|1123|||... (5 Replies)
Have difficulty to understand this pure C code to only print vowels twice from input string. Questions are commented at the end of each place.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <limits.h>
/*
*Demonstrate the use of dispatch tables
*/
/*Print a char... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
uniq
UNIQ(1) BSD General Commands Manual UNIQ(1)NAME
uniq -- report or filter out repeated lines in a file
SYNOPSIS
uniq [-c | -d | -u] [-i] [-f num] [-s chars] [input_file [output_file]]
DESCRIPTION
The uniq utility reads the specified input_file comparing adjacent lines, and writes a copy of each unique input line to the output_file. If
input_file is a single dash ('-') or absent, the standard input is read. If output_file is absent, standard output is used for output. The
second and succeeding copies of identical adjacent input lines are not written. Repeated lines in the input will not be detected if they are
not adjacent, so it may be necessary to sort the files first.
The following options are available:
-c Precede each output line with the count of the number of times the line occurred in the input, followed by a single space.
-d Only output lines that are repeated in the input.
-f num Ignore the first num fields in each input line when doing comparisons. A field is a string of non-blank characters separated from
adjacent fields by blanks. Field numbers are one based, i.e., the first field is field one.
-s chars
Ignore the first chars characters in each input line when doing comparisons. If specified in conjunction with the -f option, the
first chars characters after the first num fields will be ignored. Character numbers are one based, i.e., the first character is
character one.
-u Only output lines that are not repeated in the input.
-i Case insensitive comparison of lines.
ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of uniq as described in environ(7).
EXIT STATUS
The uniq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
COMPATIBILITY
The historic +number and -number options have been deprecated but are still supported in this implementation.
SEE ALSO sort(1)STANDARDS
The uniq utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'') as amended by Cor. 1-2002.
HISTORY
A uniq command appeared in Version 3 AT&T UNIX.
BSD December 17, 2009 BSD