Thankyou all,
I am getting several files with extra characters. So, I cannot do it by going into vi. I will have to do it by command line. As long as I don't use ksh/emacs, I should be ok?? Am I right. I am only using sh(bourne).
Also, I am just not seeing ^M but also ^@. SO will ^V-^@ also will similarly ??
Thanks
You could still go ahead with the sed command i suggested above by changing the characters something like this
Last edited by ahmedwaseem2000; 02-12-2007 at 02:20 PM..
Hi
I have a file that has semicolons in it (;) is there a way to just remove these in the file. Example
name: Joe Smith; group: Group1;
name: Mary White; group: Group2; (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a very huge file and it contains some unprintable characters like ^H and ^D.
If I try to remove using cat test1.ser| tr -d '\136 110'>newfile1 it is only removing ^and all spaces in the file.
How can I remove these characters (^D ^H) and keep my spaces as it is?
Thanks &... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
Any help on how to do the following? :eek:
I have an infile as follows:
_thisishowyouwritehelloworld
_thisisalsohowyouwritehelloworld2
I want to delete the characters from "_" to "how" and be left with:
youwritehelloworld
youwritehelloworld2
I am able to do delete from a... (2 Replies)
hi
I have a perl script conv.pl. when i execute this file and direct i to log file I see lots of ^M characters in the log file. There is no ^M in conv.pl file. Log file is generated only after conv.pl is executed.
Please help as how to get rid of these.
This conv.pl is going to get schduled... (0 Replies)
hi
I have a perl script conv.pl. when i execute this file and direct i to log file I see lots of ^M characters in the log file. There is no ^M in conv.pl file. Log file is generated only after conv.pl is executed.
Please help as how to get rid of these.
This conv.pl is going to get schduled... (5 Replies)
Dear Friends,
I want to remove text between two patters.
Problem is, it has random special characters like \ / | * ` ~ ! $ etc.
These random special characters has no fixed length. But these special characters are appearing between a fixed pattern
e.g.
DM&^%#|#!\/?CT
Expected output... (14 Replies)
Hi,
in a file, i have records as below:
123|62|absnb|267629
123|267|28728|uiuip
123|567|26761|2676
i want to remove the non printable characters after the end of each record.
I guess there are certain charcters but not visible.
i don't know what character that is exactly.
I used... (2 Replies)
I have been given a shell script that I need to amend. To do the following
extract the filename from the flag file by removing the .flag extension.
# Local variables
# Find if the flag files exists
MASK=coda_mil2*.flag
# Are there any files?
bookmark="40"
fileFound=0
ls -1... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
Im having a bit of difficulty with this one and I suspect its because of the character I want to match against maybe causing me a problem, but i wanted to remove everything up to (but not including) the first instance of '{' in a string
so for example the string that I want to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
dos2unix
dos2unix(1) User Commands dos2unix(1)NAME
dos2unix - convert text file from DOS format to ISO format
SYNOPSIS
dos2unix [-ascii] [-iso] [-7] [-437 | -850 | -860 | -863 | -865] originalfile convertedfile
DESCRIPTION
The dos2unix utility converts characters in the DOS extended character set to the corresponding ISO standard characters.
This command can be invoked from either DOS or SunOS. However, the filenames must conform to the conventions of the environment in which
the command is invoked.
If the original file and the converted file are the same, dos2unix will rewrite the original file after converting it.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-ascii Removes extra carriage returns and converts end of file characters in DOS format text files to conform to SunOS require-
ments.
-iso This is the default. It converts characters in the DOS extended character set to the corresponding ISO standard charac-
ters.
-7 Converts 8 bit DOS graphics characters to 7 bit space characters so that SunOS can read the file.
On non-i386 systems, dos2unix will attempt to obtain the keyboard type to determine which code page to use. Otherwise, the default is US.
The user may override the code page with one of the following options:
-437 Use US code page
-850 Use multilingual code page
-860 Use Portuguese code page
-863 Use French Canadian code page
-865 Use Danish code page
OPERANDS
The following operands are required:
originalfile The original file in DOS format that is being converted to ISO format.
convertedfile The new file in ISO format that has been converted from the original DOS file format.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWesu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO unix2dos(1), ls(1), attributes(5)DIAGNOSTICS
File filename not found, or no read permission
The input file you specified does not exist, or you do not have read permission. Check with the SunOS command, ls -l (see ls(1)).
Bad output filename filename, or no write permission
The output file you specified is either invalid, or you do not have write permission for that file or the directory that contains it.
Check also that the drive or diskette is not write-protected.
Error while writing to temporary file
An error occurred while converting your file, possibly because there is not enough space on the current drive. Check the amount of
space on the current drive using the DIR command. Also be certain that the default diskette or drive is write-enabled (not write-pro-
tected). Notice that when this error occurs, the original file remains intact.
Translated temporary file name = filename.
Could not rename temporary file to filename.
The program could not perform the final step in converting your file. Your converted file is stored under the name indicated on the
second line of this message.
SunOS 5.10 14 Sep 2000 dos2unix(1)