has anyone got any suggestions how i would pick up the string as part of a substitution inclusive of the carriage return.
ie
i want to pick up <<NAME>> from the PS output but the <<; seems to be on the line before the NAME.
Any ideas are appreciated!
... (3 Replies)
Hello there,
I need to remove carriage return characters (\n and \r) from any input file specified. This is what I am doing right now:
- dumping the file to octal format using the command 'od -c file_name
- removing and \s and \n characters using sed commands
What I need to do now is... (3 Replies)
Hello I'm trying to write a shell script which can remove a carriage return and/or line feed from a file, so the resulting file all ends up on one line.
So, I begin with a file like this
text in file!<CR>
line two!<CR>
line three!<CR>
END!<CR>
And I want to end up with a file... (1 Reply)
Hi I would like to add carriage return at end of file,
because we need to mask the customer names for detailed records.
Some what the file doesnot have carriage at end of line of last record.So that i 'll get 2 records when use
---aa.txt-----
1|aaa|bbb|ccc
2|bbbb|hghgh|ggg
000002
tail... (2 Replies)
Hi - I tried to remove ^M in a delimited file using "tr -d "\r" and "sed 's/^M//g'", but it does not work quite well. While the ^M is removed, the format of the record is still cut in half, like
a,b, c
c,d,e
The delimited file is generated using sh script by outputing a SQL query result to... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I am getting a xml file where the first field contains a carriage return and the all other fields doesnot contains any carriage return. So all the other records comes in the second line.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ns0:iSeriesCspIntegration... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am reading two files and writing out the file name and count of lines in each file to an output file.
My script looks like this:
echo "input_file1.out;`wc -l < input_file1.out | sed 's/^]*\(.*\)]*$/\1/'` " > comp_file1.out
echo "input_file2.out;`wc -l < input_file2.out | sed... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to remove carriage return in a file using some unix command without writing a script
my file is as follows
abc1 abc2 abc3 abc4
abc5 bac6
abc1 abc2 abc3 abc4
abc5 bac6
I want the output as follows:
abc1 abc2 abc3 abc4 abc5 bac6
abc1 abc2 abc3 abc4 abc5 bac6
,
Please... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a problem loading the data from a csv file
As you see below in the Input ,For the Data starting with " there are 2 lines, which i want to make them into single without changing the format of that data.
You can see the desired output below:
While i try to open the csv file and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mlavanya
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
dp
dp(8) System Manager's Manual dp(8)NAME
dp - parse dates RFC 822-style
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/mh/dp [-form file] [-format string] [-help] [-width columns] dates
OPTIONS
Overrides the default output format of dp. The output is formatted according to the instructions in the specified file. This must be a
format file; see mh-format(4). Overrides the default output format of dp. The output is formatted according to the instructions in the
specified string. This must be a format string; see mh-format(4).
The argument to the -format option must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes dp. Therefore, you should usually
place the argument to this option inside double quotes ("). Prints a list of the valid options to this command. Specifies the
width of the screen in columns.
The defaults for this command are as follows:
-width defaults to the width of the terminal
DESCRIPTION
The dp command parses dates according to the ARPA Internet standard. It also understands many non-standard formats, such as those produced
by TOPS-20 sites and some UNIX sites using ctime(3). It is useful for seeing how MH will interpret a date.
The dp program treats each argument as a single date, and prints the date out in the official RFC 822 format. Hence, it is usually best to
enclose each argument in double quotes (") for the shell.
EXAMPLES
This is the default format string used by dp:
%<(nodate{text})error: %{text}%|%(pretty{text})%>
When an error is detected, this prints error: and the date that is in error. Otherwise, it outputs the proper RFC 822 format of the date.
FILES
User profile.
SEE ALSO
Commands: ap(8)
Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC 822)
dp(8)