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Full Discussion: First Occurence
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users First Occurence Post 302094641 by nilesrex on Monday 30th of October 2006 05:37:01 PM
Old 10-30-2006
awk -F: '{ print $2 "," }' inputdata.txt | sed -e 'N;s/\n/ /' | sed 's/,$//' | sed 's/^,//'

this one gives what you want but not good to have so many piped o/p's
 

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DateFormat(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     DateFormat(3)

NAME
Log::Log4perl::DateFormat - Log4perl advanced date formatter helper class SYNOPSIS
use Log::Log4perl::DateFormat; my $format = Log::Log4perl::DateFormat->new("HH:mm:ss,SSS"); # Simple time, resolution in seconds my $time = time(); print $format->format($time), " "; # => "17:02:39,000" # Advanced time, resultion in milliseconds use Time::HiRes; my ($secs, $msecs) = Time::HiRes::gettimeofday(); print $format->format($secs, $msecs), " "; # => "17:02:39,959" DESCRIPTION
"Log::Log4perl::DateFormat" is a low-level helper class for the advanced date formatting functions in "Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout". Unless you're writing your own Layout class like Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout, there's probably not much use for you to read this. "Log::Log4perl::DateFormat" is a formatter which allows dates to be formatted according to the log4j spec on http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html which allows the following placeholders to be recognized and processed: Symbol Meaning Presentation Example ------ ------- ------------ ------- G era designator (Text) AD y year (Number) 1996 M month in year (Text & Number) July & 07 d day in month (Number) 10 h hour in am/pm (1~12) (Number) 12 H hour in day (0~23) (Number) 0 m minute in hour (Number) 30 s second in minute (Number) 55 S millisecond (Number) 978 E day in week (Text) Tuesday D day in year (Number) 189 F day of week in month (Number) 2 (2nd Wed in July) w week in year (Number) 27 W week in month (Number) 2 a am/pm marker (Text) PM k hour in day (1~24) (Number) 24 K hour in am/pm (0~11) (Number) 0 z time zone (Text) Pacific Standard Time Z RFC 822 time zone (Text) -0800 ' escape for text (Delimiter) '' single quote (Literal) ' For example, if you want to format the current Unix time in "MM/dd HH:mm" format, all you have to do is this: use Log::Log4perl::DateFormat; my $format = Log::Log4perl::DateFormat->new("MM/dd HH:mm"); my $time = time(); print $format->format($time), " "; While the "new()" method is expensive, because it parses the format strings and sets up all kinds of structures behind the scenes, followup calls to "format()" are fast, because "DateFormat" will just call "localtime()" and "sprintf()" once to return the formatted date/time string. So, typically, you would initialize the formatter once and then reuse it over and over again to display all kinds of time values. Also, for your convenience, the following predefined formats are available, just as outlined in the log4j spec: Format Equivalent Example ABSOLUTE "HH:mm:ss,SSS" "15:49:37,459" DATE "dd MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss,SSS" "06 Nov 1994 15:49:37,459" ISO8601 "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss,SSS" "1999-11-27 15:49:37,459" APACHE "[EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss yyyy]" "[Wed Mar 16 15:49:37 2005]" So, instead of passing Log::Log4perl::DateFormat->new("HH:mm:ss,SSS"); you could just as well say Log::Log4perl::DateFormat->new("ABSOLUTE"); and get the same result later on. Known Shortcomings The following placeholders are currently not recognized, unless someone (and that could be you :) implements them: F day of week in month w week in year W week in month k hour in day K hour in am/pm z timezone (but we got 'Z' for the numeric time zone value) Also, "Log::Log4perl::DateFormat" just knows about English week and month names, internationalization support has to be added. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2009 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.1 2010-02-07 DateFormat(3)
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