:) have you tried awk... and pipe the actual start and end dates in the directory you're looking for when i go through my directories and look for certain matching files thats what i do
except I am not quite sure what you are asking for so I can't give an exact example
awk -f script file |... (0 Replies)
Hi. I've been playing around a bit. This isn't for any practical purpose-- it's really just a theoretical exercise. I wrote this little thing:
foreach num ( 6 5 4 )
awk -v "number=$num" 'BEGIN{for(x=0;x<$number;x++) printf "-"; printf "\n"}'
end
I would expect the following output:
... (3 Replies)
If there exists a field in stdin, print it, otherwise, print hello.....
These print nothing:
cat /dev/null | awk '{if ( length > 0 ) print $1; else print "hello"}'
cat /dev/null | awk '{if ( $1 ) print $1; else print "hello"}'But the scripts work if I run them directly in a terminal:
... (8 Replies)
hi guys,
i want to parse a file using public function, the file contain raw data in the below format i want to get the output like this to load it to Oracle DB
MARWA1,BSS:26,1,3,0,0,0,0,0.00,22,22,22.00
MARWA2,BSS:26,1,3,0,0,0,0,0.00,22,22,22.00
this the file raw format:
Number of... (6 Replies)
Hello all!
I have problem in hp-ux 11.11 in awk
I want to grep sar -d 2 1 only 3 column, but have error in awk in hp-ux 11.11
Example:
#echo 123 234 | awk '{print $2}'
123 234
The situattions in commands bdf | awk {print $5}' some...
In hp-ux 11.31 - OK!
How resolve problem (15 Replies)
So, I have an awk statement that does a little filtering and formats the output conveniently. Here's what I had originally:
<input> | awk -F "\t" 'BEGIN{OFS=","} {sub(" ","_",$2)} (NR == 1) || (substr($2,9,2) >= 19 && substr($2,1,7) == "2011-02") {print}'
That did what I wanted, except that... (2 Replies)
Heyas
Trying to parse a tempfile, but somehow i mess up.
To my understand, this should work...
Plain:
tail -n1 out.tmp
1 81.5M 1 1066k 0 0 359k 0 0:03:52 0:00:02 0:03:50 359k
I want to get the 81.5M, so i'd assume it'll be $2 for awk....
tail -n1 out.tmp | awk... (24 Replies)
Discussion started by: sea
24 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
english
English(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide English(3pm)NAME
English - use nice English (or awk) names for ugly punctuation variables
SYNOPSIS
use English;
use English qw( -no_match_vars ) ; # Avoids regex performance penalty
# in perl 5.16 and earlier
...
if ($ERRNO =~ /denied/) { ... }
DESCRIPTION
This module provides aliases for the built-in variables whose names no one seems to like to read. Variables with side-effects which get
triggered just by accessing them (like $0) will still be affected.
For those variables that have an awk version, both long and short English alternatives are provided. For example, the $/ variable can be
referred to either $RS or $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR if you are using the English module.
See perlvar for a complete list of these.
PERFORMANCE
NOTE: This was fixed in perl 5.20. Mentioning these three variables no longer makes a speed difference. This section still applies if
your code is to run on perl 5.18 or earlier.
This module can provoke sizeable inefficiencies for regular expressions, due to unfortunate implementation details. If performance matters
in your application and you don't need $PREMATCH, $MATCH, or $POSTMATCH, try doing
use English qw( -no_match_vars ) ;
. It is especially important to do this in modules to avoid penalizing all applications which use them.
perl v5.18.2 2014-01-06 English(3pm)