I'm trying to delete lines from a large text file using VI.
Every line that I am wanting to delete start with 'S' - all others do not. (A list of users)
I've tried using * but doesn't seem to like it...any ideas...
Doesn't have to be VI - but I'm better with VI than sed/awk. (8 Replies)
when writing a shell script (bourne) and using a unix command like 'ls' is there anything special you need to do to use a wildcard (like *)? (3 Replies)
ok, I'm trying to write a script file that lists files with specific elements in the name into a txt file, it looks like this
ls s*.dat > file_names.txt
can't figure out whats wrong with that line, any ideas?
thanks in advance (10 Replies)
Hi All
Please excuse another straightforward question. When creating a tar archive from a directory I am attempting to use wildcards to eliminate certain filetypes (otherwise the archive gets too large). So I am looking for something along these lines.
tar -cf archive.tar * <minus all *.rst... (5 Replies)
Hello
I have this script:
#!/bin/ksh
INPUTFILE=$1
TEMPFILE=$INPUTFILE.$$
OUTPUTFILE=$INPUTFILE.new
# nr of arguments has to be 1
if
then
echo "\nUsage: $0 inputfile\n"
return 1
fi
# inputfile must exist and be readable
if
then (13 Replies)
Hi All,
Need you guys' help to achieve the following:
I have some strings and i wish to threw off the end part that's in the file path.
From:
/directoryname1/subdirectoryname1/abc.txt
/directoryname2/subdirectoryname2/defggf.txt
To:
/directoryname1/subdirectoryname1/... (7 Replies)
Is there some rule about using wildcards in path? Say I want to create a file, but one of the directories in the path is called 1433d.default and on different machines it will be called <some other string>.default
touch ~/Library/Application/*.default/myfile
In theory I thought that... (5 Replies)
I am using this code to locate and modify one particular ID in a file containing thousands of entries
sed 's/^>OldID/>NewID/g' Infile > Outfile
How can I modify the code so I can rename all old IDs to a new unique ID?
I tried this
sed 's/^>*/>NewID/g' Infile > Outfile
but it did not... (10 Replies)
These 2 websites do a GREAT job of explaining different types of wildcards. I learned about the categories of characters which I never knew about at all.
GNU/Linux Command-Line Tools Guide - Wildcards
GREP (1 Reply)