I wrote a script on HPUX 11.11 to turn a Decimal subnet mask (255.255.254.0) to hex 0xfffffe00 (subset of a bigger script). It works great on the HPUX systems but on the freebsd box the awk is not seperating the fields properly. I tried to google for a solution and seaching these forums i am just... (3 Replies)
I have some version of AWK that does not support regular expression field separators ( neither do I have nawk or gawk). How do I go about reading a line with the field separator as either the string "=#" or "+=".
My data looks like this:
abhishek=#nnnnn+#1234+#87
One option is to use... (2 Replies)
Hai
I am using
bash-2.03$ bash --version
GNU bash, version 2.03.0(1)-release (sparc-sun-solaris)
I am not able to use gawk command its showing command not found , why ?
Eg:
awk 'NR==1' fix.txt | gawk 'BEGIN { FIELDWIDTHS = "3 2" } { printf($1"|"$2); }'... (8 Replies)
Hi Please help me out with this problem:
I want to have a script that would change the nth field seperator in a line into something else.
like
a,d,4,2,97,8,9
into
a,d,4,2,97/8/9
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi all,
Can anybody think of a way to do this? I have a file with content like the following:
F_TOP_PARAM_VALUEF_TOP_SOURCEF_TOP_DEL_NOTIFICATIONF_DEST_ADDRF_TOP_DEL_TYPE
What I want to do is print out the value in the square brackets after F_TOP_SOURCE. So in this case I'd like to print... (4 Replies)
Good Day,
Im new to scripting especially awk and sed. I just would like to ask help from you guys about a sed command that prints the line immediately after a regexp, but not the line containing the regexp.
sed -n '/regexp/{n;p;}' filename
What if my regexp is 3 word or a sentence. Im... (3 Replies)
"355"|""|"NJ"|"A0A 1W0"|"V"|""|""|""|"N"
I've the above sample data seperated with pipe delimeter and in the file I want to replace a space with "|" to the 4th field so the result would be like below. So it would change from 9 fields to 10 fields.
"355"|""|"NJ"|"A0A"|"1W0"|"V"|""|""|""|"N"
... (3 Replies)
Is there a way I could use different a different field seperator for different parts of the body?
kinda like
{FS = ":"}
FILENAME == "products"{
price = $3
if(numprods < $1-100)
numprods = $1-100
}
{FS = "/"}{}
FILENAME == "associates"{
associateid... (5 Replies)
JOIN(1) General Commands Manual JOIN(1)NAME
join - relational database operator
SYNOPSIS
join [-an] [-e s] [-o list] [-tc] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
Join forms, on the standard output, a join of the two relations specified by the lines of file1 and file2. If file1 is `-', the standard
input is used.
File1 and file2 must be sorted in increasing ASCII collating sequence on the fields on which they are to be joined, normally the first in
each line.
There is one line in the output for each pair of lines in file1 and file2 that have identical join fields. The output line normally con-
sists of the common field, then the rest of the line from file1, then the rest of the line from file2.
Fields are normally separated by blank, tab or newline. In this case, multiple separators count as one, and leading separators are dis-
carded.
These options are recognized:
-an In addition to the normal output, produce a line for each unpairable line in file n, where n is 1 or 2.
-e s Replace empty output fields by string s.
-o list
Each output line comprises the fields specified in list, each element of which has the form n.m, where n is a file number and m is a
field number.
-tc Use character c as a separator (tab character). Every appearance of c in a line is significant.
SEE ALSO sort(1), comm(1), awk(1).
BUGS
With default field separation, the collating sequence is that of sort -b; with -t, the sequence is that of a plain sort.
The conventions of join, sort, comm, uniq, look and awk(1) are wildly incongruous.
7th Edition April 29, 1985 JOIN(1)