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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find lines greater than 80 characters in a file Post 302109965 by matrixmadhan on Friday 9th of March 2007 06:50:36 AM
Old 03-09-2007
Well possibly I could be wrong!

Meaning of columns is ambiguous here Smilie

What i meant is,
Code:
c1 <delimiter> c2 <delimiter> c3 ... <cn>

literal meaning of column as such being delimited by some delimiter ( including the default delimiter as well )

Its OP who should correct us, giving the meaning of columns here,

whether is 80 chars in a line or
columns as I had said .

Till OP clears it, I had to get back my statement that your command is wrong.

Am sorry about that ! Smilie
 

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COMM(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   COMM(1)

NAME
comm -- select or reject lines common to two files SYNOPSIS
comm [-123i] file1 file2 DESCRIPTION
The comm utility reads file1 and file2, which should be sorted lexically, and produces three text columns as output: lines only in file1; lines only in file2; and lines in both files. The filename ``-'' means the standard input. The following options are available: -1 Suppress printing of column 1, lines only in file1. -2 Suppress printing of column 2, lines only in file2. -3 Suppress printing of column 3, lines common to both. -i Case insensitive comparison of lines. Each column will have a number of tab characters prepended to it equal to the number of lower numbered columns that are being printed. For example, if column number two is being suppressed, lines printed in column number one will not have any tabs preceding them, and lines printed in column number three will have one. The comm utility assumes that the files are lexically sorted; all characters participate in line comparisons. ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of comm as described in environ(7). EXIT STATUS
The comm utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
cmp(1), diff(1), sort(1), uniq(1) STANDARDS
The comm utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2''). The -i option is an extension to the POSIX standard. HISTORY
A comm command appeared in Version 4 AT&T UNIX. BSD
December 12, 2009 BSD
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