"man" gives an explanation on all options taken separately, but nothing I can use to predict the result of a cascaded use of these options. The general consensus is to say that IŽll achieve the -u effects AND the -n effects, but none of the below descriptions is warning me that I will lose my "2:A2" line.
Can someone please tell me how to sort a file, based on a particular position within the file?
I have a line sequential file that is 152 bytes per record, in which i need to sort the file based on the numeric data in positions 142-152.
I have done the "man sort" command and see the -k option... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am going to sort a huge flat file using sort command, this file is about 36 million lines, 179 fields delimitered by Ctrl B (002). eg.
1^B198709.....
17^B200301....
3^B196511....
.....
I want this file being sorted by the first field, the result is like :
1^B198709........ (2 Replies)
Hi i have a file containing ip addresses and want to sort those IP addresses in the ascending order.
file (match.txt) contents are:
192.168.0.100
192.168.0.16
192.168.0.10
192.168.0.23
192.168.0.2
192.168.0.3
192.168.0.1
192.168.0.222
i tried:
sort -n match.txt
output is :... (3 Replies)
Hi to all.
I'm trying to sort this with the Unix command sort.
user1:12345678:3.5:2.5:8:1:2:3
user2:12345679:4.5:3.5:8:1:3:2
user3:12345687:5.5:2.5:6:1:3:2
user4:12345670:5.5:2.5:5:3:2:1
user5:12345671:2.5:5.5:7:2:3:1
I need to get this:
user3:12345687:5.5:2.5:6:1:3:2... (7 Replies)
I have file ipaddress.txt
192.168.1.25
127.3.9.12
192.168.12.1
127.21.2.3
127.92.80.6
192.168.4.5
I want to sort as
127.3.9.12
127.21.2.3
127.92.80.6
192.168.1.25
192.168.12.1
192.168.4.5
So what sort command do I have to use. (1 Reply)
I have a file with the following content:-
181268525,0640613864,B,113,22-dec-2011 14:12:08,
181268525,0640613864,C,113,25-dec-2011 14:18:50,
181268525,0640613864,L,113,26-dec-2011 14:07:46,
181268525,0640613864,X,113,01-jan-2012 16:57:45,
181268525,0640613864,X,113,04-jan-2012 14:13:27,... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have used sort -k1 -n data.txt > output.txt command on a large text data file with over 1,000,000 rows. The command managed to sort the data but the code did not read data according to sequence of occurrence. Given below are the first five lines of the data I need to sort;
1 1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Theo Score
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
sort
SORT(1) General Commands Manual SORT(1)NAME
sort - sort a file of ASCII lines
SYNOPSIS
sort [-bcdfimnru] [-tc] [-o name] [+pos1] [-pos2] file ...
OPTIONS -b Skip leading blanks when making comparisons
-c Check to see if a file is sorted
-d Dictionary order: ignore punctuation
-f Fold upper case onto lower case
-i Ignore nonASCII characters
-m Merge presorted files
-n Numeric sort order
-o Next argument is output file
-r Reverse the sort order
-t Following character is field separator
-u Unique mode (delete duplicate lines)
EXAMPLES
sort -nr file # Sort keys numerically, reversed
sort +2 -4 file # Sort using fields 2 and 3 as key
sort +2 -t: -o out # Field separator is :
sort +.3 -.6 # Characters 3 through 5 form the key
DESCRIPTION
Sort sorts one or more files. If no files are specified, stdin is sorted. Output is written on standard output, unless -o is specified.
The options +pos1 -pos2 use only fields pos1 up to but not including pos2 as the sort key, where a field is a string of characters delim-
ited by spaces and tabs, unless a different field delimiter is specified with -t. Both pos1 and pos2 have the form m.n where m tells the
number of fields and n tells the number of characters. Either m or n may be omitted.
SEE ALSO comm(1), grep(1), uniq(1).
SORT(1)