I had to delete rows when a record was missing a field. My solution was
cut -c 202-402 ${dataFile} | awk '{if (substr($0,103,30) !~ /^ *$/) print $0} >> ${workFile}
The cut is because they came two records to a row.
Anyone want to offer a more elegant solution? (2 Replies)
When I use this command I get an output of some numbers
cat ac.20070511 | cut -d" " -f19
Is there any way for me to display only the numbers that are greater than 1000 but not all the numbers in the ouput.
Can any one help me with this. :) (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files say A and B, Both files have some common records few records which are unique to file A and unique to file B.
Can anyone please help me out to find the records which are present in only B
Please consider the files are of too large size.
Thanks:confused: (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I've got a script to output YAML data, and I want to display data that's held inside variables inside one large CAT area. What's the easiest way to do this?
cat << "END"
---
classes:
- general_image
- $intro #Variable 1
- $mid #Variable 2
... (2 Replies)
Hello attempting to redirect out to create a startup script in solaris. The steps are working but the $1 entry is being left out. syntax below and content of output file below.
cat > S99build << EOF
> #!/bin/bash
> case $1 in
> 'start')
> /usr/os-buildsol.sh
>
> ;;
> esac
> exit 0
>... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone.
I am a newbie to Linux stuff. I have this kind of problem which couldn't solve alone. I have a text file with records separated by empty lines like this:
ID: 20
Name: X
Age: 19
ID: 21
Name: Z
ID: 22
Email: xxx@yahoo.com
Name: Y
Age: 19
I want to grep records that... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have thousands of data in 1 file that need to be sorted out. My file is like below:-
File1.txt
condition 1
scaf_27 CDS 48317 48517 "e_gww2.27.12.1" Id 35277
scaf_27 stop_cod 48317 48319 "e_gww2.27.12.1"
scaf_27 CDS 48518 49107 "e_gww2.27.12.1" ... (4 Replies)
I have a script to do a couple simple but repetitive commands on files that are provided to us. One of the things is to get rid of the line feeds. This is the section that is causing problems, i even cut this section into its own file to make sure nothing else was affecting it.
#!/usr/bin/bash... (4 Replies)
I have a fixed width file. The records looks something similar to below:
Type ID SSN NAME .....AND SOME MORE FIELDS
A1 1234 .....
A1 1234 .....
B1 1234 .....
M2 4567 .....
M2 4567 .....
N2 4567 .....
N2 4567 .....
A1 9999
N2 9999
Now if A1 is present then B1 has to be present.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Saanvi1
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
diff
DIFF(1) General Commands Manual DIFF(1)NAME
diff - print differences between two files
SYNOPSIS
diff [-c | -e | -C n] [-br]file1 file2
OPTIONS -C n Produce output that contains n lines of context
-b Ignore white space when comparing
-c Produce output that contains three lines of context
-e Produce an ed-script to convert file1 into file2
-r Apply diff recursively to files and directories of
EXAMPLES
diff file1 file2 # Print differences between 2 files
diff -C 0 file1 file2
# Same as above
diff -C 3 file1 file2
# Output three lines of context with every
diff -c file1 file2 # Same
diff /etc /dev # Compares recursively the directories /etc and /dev
diff passwd /etc # Compares ./passwd to /etc/passwd
DESCRIPTION
the same name, when file1 and file2 are both directories" difference encountered"
Diff compares two files and generates a list of lines telling how the two files differ. Lines may not be longer than 128 characters. If
the two arguments on the command line are both directories, diff recursively steps through all subdirectories comparing files of the same
name. If a file name is found only in one directory, a diagnostic message is written to stdout. A file that is of either block special,
character special or FIFO special type, cannot be compared to any other file. On the other hand, if there is one directory and one file
given on the command line, diff tries to compare the file with the same name as file in the directory directory.
SEE ALSO cdiff(1), cmp(1), comm(1), patch(1).
DIFF(1)