Hi all,
This is my first post here, so please bear with me!
I have a file coming into a korn shell script, fixed length. Example:
Peter (25 spaces) D (29 spaces) Younan (24 spaces)
Jim (27 spaces) (30 spaces) ... (4 Replies)
I have a flat file and need to count no of records in the file less the header and the trailer record.
I would appreciate any and all asistance
Thanks
Hadi Lalani (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have two files say file1 and file2.
I want to check the number of records in file1 and if its atleast 2 (i.e., 2 or greater than 2 ) then I have to check records in file2 .If records in file2 is atleast 1 (i.e. if its not empty ) i have to set some conditions .
Could you pls... (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)
I have 2 files
"File 1" is delimited by ";" and "File 2" is delimited by "|".
File 1 below (3 record shown):
Doc1;03/01/2012;New York;6 Main Street;Mr. Smith 1;Mr. Jones
Doc2;03/01/2012;Syracuse;876 Broadway;John Davis;Barbara Lull
Doc3;03/01/2012;Buffalo;779 Old Windy Road;Charles... (2 Replies)
Hi I am new to shell programming in unix
Please if I can provide help.
I have a file structure of a header record and "N" detail records.
The header record will be the total number of detail records
I need to split the file in 2:
One for the header
Another for all detail records
Could... (1 Reply)
Not sure if this is the correct forum for this question. I have two files. file1.zip, file2
Input:
file1.zip
col1, col2 , col3
a , b , 0:0:0:0:0:c436:9346:d40b
x, y, 0:0:0:0:0:880:39f9:c9a7
m, n , 0:0:0:0:0:80c7:9161:fe00
file2.txt
col1
c4:36:93:46:d4:0b... (1 Reply)
I have this code with me but the condition is If any of the mandatory columns are null then entire file will be rejected.
LOAD DATA
infile ' ' #specifies the name of a datafile containing data that you want to load
BADFILE ' ' #specifies the name of... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: raka123
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
strtok
STRTOK(3) BSD Library Functions Manual STRTOK(3)NAME
strtok, strtok_r -- string tokens
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h>
char *
strtok(char *str, const char *sep);
char *
strtok_r(char *str, const char *sep, char **last);
DESCRIPTION
This interface is obsoleted by strsep(3).
The strtok() function is used to isolate sequential tokens in a null-terminated string, str. These tokens are separated in the string by at
least one of the characters in sep. The first time that strtok() is called, str should be specified; subsequent calls, wishing to obtain
further tokens from the same string, should pass a null pointer instead. The separator string, sep, must be supplied each time, and may
change between calls.
The implementation will behave as if no library function calls strtok().
The strtok_r() function is a reentrant version of strtok(). The context pointer last must be provided on each call. The strtok_r() function
may also be used to nest two parsing loops within one another, as long as separate context pointers are used.
The strtok() and strtok_r() functions return a pointer to the beginning of each subsequent token in the string, after replacing the token
itself with a NUL character. When no more tokens remain, a null pointer is returned.
EXAMPLES
The following uses strtok_r() to parse two strings using separate contexts:
char test[80], blah[80];
char *sep = "\/:;=-";
char *word, *phrase, *brkt, *brkb;
strcpy(test, "This;is.a:test:of=the/string\tokenizer-function.");
for (word = strtok_r(test, sep, &brkt);
word;
word = strtok_r(NULL, sep, &brkt))
{
strcpy(blah, "blah:blat:blab:blag");
for (phrase = strtok_r(blah, sep, &brkb);
phrase;
phrase = strtok_r(NULL, sep, &brkb))
{
printf("So far we're at %s:%s
", word, phrase);
}
}
SEE ALSO memchr(3), strchr(3), strcspn(3), strpbrk(3), strrchr(3), strsep(3), strspn(3), strstr(3), wcstok(3)STANDARDS
The strtok() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90'').
AUTHORS
Wes Peters <wes@softweyr.com>, Softweyr LLC
Based on the FreeBSD 3.0 implementation.
BUGS
The System V strtok(), if handed a string containing only delimiter characters, will not alter the next starting point, so that a call to
strtok() with a different (or empty) delimiter string may return a non-NULL value. Since this implementation always alters the next starting
point, such a sequence of calls would always return NULL.
BSD November 27, 1998 BSD