I am hoping somebody here will be either be able to solve my troubles or at least give me a push in the right direction .
I am developing a shell script to read in 4 different files worth of data that each contain a list of:
username firstname secondname group score
I have got my script sorting the files into a final file with the format
username firstname secondname group score score score score
I have a solution to do this working fine using join until I get one situation. The names listed do not appear in all files and I need to put 0 in for the score when the name is missing. But join is making firstname, secondname and group become 0's too if the person is missing in any file but the last.
The current code im using is:
How can i solve this? I have tried searching Google and have spent time looking through many examples. Just with no similar solution to what i am looking for.
Hi guyz
Excuse me for posting simple question
I tried join and sort and other perl commands but failed
I have 2 files. 1st file contain single column with around 6000 values (rows).
Second file contain 2 columns 1st column is the same column (in 1st file) but randomly ordered and second... (5 Replies)
Hello,
My apologies if this has been posted elsewhere, I have had a look at several threads but I am still confused how to use these functions. I have two files, each with 5 columns:
File A: (tab-delimited)
PDB CHAIN Start End Fragment
1avq A 171 176 awyfan
1avq A 172 177 wyfany
1c7k A 2 7... (3 Replies)
Been tearing my hair out trying to work out how to make the -t option in the join command work.
Joining two files on col 1; columns in both files are separated by tabs.
file1:
2010/02/01-00:00 10.63
2010/02/01-00:06 10.63
2010/02/01-00:12 10.61
2010/02/01-00:18 10.58
(there are LOTS... (4 Replies)
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
I have two files created from extracting data off of two CSV files, one containing class enrollment on a specific quarter and the other containing grades for that specific quarter. The Enrollment file generated contains course name,... (11 Replies)
Hello,
Going through book, "Guide to UNIX Using Linux". I am doing one of the projects that has me writing scripts to join files. Here is my pnumname script and I am extracting the programmers names and numbers from the program file and redirecting the output to the file pnn. I then created a... (0 Replies)
So I want to join two files that have a lot of rows
The file named gen1 has 2 columns:
head gen1
1008567 0.4026931012
1119535 0.7088912314
1120590 0.7093805634
1145994 0.7287952590
1148140 0.7313924434
1155173 0.7359550430
1188481 0.7598914553
1201155 0.7663406553
1206921... (2 Replies)
Dear all,
I have two files (each only contains 1 column) as attached. I want to combined the two files and only show the common records in both files. But when I use join command only the last row was combined. Anyone know what is the problem? I don't know how to write the correct code to only... (2 Replies)
I have a weird issue going on with the join command...
I have two files I am trying to join...here is a line from each file with the important parts marked in red:
file1:
/groupspace/ccops/cmis/bauwkrcn/commsamp_20140315.txt,1
file2:... (3 Replies)
I have 2 files. File 1 is a daily file with only a bunch of IDs and a date column. File 2 has all the dump of IDs and their respective cost. I basically want an inner join. When I am picking a few rows from these files and joining, they work perfectly fine. But when I join the full files together,... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Varshha
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
checkbashisms
CHECKBASHISMS(1) General Commands Manual CHECKBASHISMS(1)NAME
checkbashisms - check for bashisms in /bin/sh scripts
SYNOPSIS
checkbashisms script ...
checkbashisms --help|--version
DESCRIPTION
checkbashisms, based on one of the checks from the lintian system, performs basic checks on /bin/sh shell scripts for the possible presence
of bashisms. It takes the names of the shell scripts on the command line, and outputs warnings if possible bashisms are detected.
Note that the definition of a bashism in this context roughly equates to "a shell feature that is not required to be supported by POSIX";
this means that some issues flagged may be permitted under optional sections of POSIX, such as XSI or User Portability.
In cases where POSIX and Debian Policy disagree, checkbashisms by default allows extensions permitted by Policy but may also provide
options for stricter checking.
OPTIONS --help, -h
Show a summary of options.
--newline, -n
Check for "echo -n" usage (non POSIX but required by Debian Policy 10.4.)
--posix, -p
Check for issues which are non POSIX but required to be supported by Debian Policy 10.4 (implies -n).
--force, -f
Force each script to be checked, even if it would normally not be (for instance, it has a bash or non POSIX shell shebang or appears
to be a shell wrapper).
--extra, -x
Highlight lines which, whilst they do not contain bashisms, may be useful in determining whether a particular issue is a false posi-
tive which may be ignored. For example, the use of "$BASH_ENV" may be preceded by checking whether "$BASH" is set.
--version, -v
Show version and copyright information.
EXIT VALUES
The exit value will be 0 if no possible bashisms or other problems were detected. Otherwise it will be the sum of the following error val-
ues:
1 A possible bashism was detected.
2 A file was skipped for some reason, for example, because it was unreadable or not found. The warning message will give details.
SEE ALSO lintian(1).
AUTHOR
checkbashisms was originally written as a shell script by Yann Dirson <dirson@debian.org> and rewritten in Perl with many more features by
Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org>.
DEBIAN Debian Utilities CHECKBASHISMS(1)