Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Identify records having junk characters in unix Post 302145515 by sureshg_sampat on Wednesday 14th of November 2007 12:39:40 PM
Old 11-14-2007
Hi ,

Junk characters means somethin like this when I did a cat on the unix file

|ש××××ª× ×¢×× ×ר××¦× ××שר×ת ×××× ××× ×××ר×× ×- ×©× × ×ש××××××× ××××¢× ××××¤× ×××§× ×× ×××ר ×××ש×××××××××× ××× × ×סר××× ××©× × ××××××× ×©×× ×× × ×ק××××. ×××§×©× ×ס×ר××××× ×©× × ×©×"×: 482304481-×ש××× ×©× 3 ×××××ת ×©× ××¡×¨× ×¨×§ ×©× ××××× ×©× ×סר ×××¢× ×ª× ×××ר ×××ש×××ק××× ×ª×× 6 ×××× ××× ×¢××¨× ×××ש××××ס××¨× ×ס×פ×ת. ××¢××¨×ª× ×ת××× ×ת ×ת ××¢×× ×××. ×××ת|

Thanks and Regards,
Suresh
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Remove junk characters using Perl

Guys, can you help me in removing the junk character "^S" from the below line using perl Reference Data Not Recognised ^S Where a value is provided by the consuming system, which is not reco Thanks, M.Mohan (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mohan_xunil
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

finding junk characters

Hi, Is there anyway to find the junk characters in a file.Consider the file has data as given below: 123|abc^M|Doctor^C #record 1 234|def|Med #record 2 345|dfg^C|Wrong^V #record 3 The junk characters are highlighted and this is a pipe delimited file. Is there anyway to... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashwin3086
20 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replacing junk characters

Hi, I have a file with data as given below $cat file1 123|abc|345 345|def|567 The first record is good record. The second record has an invisible junk character like \032. I was replace all the occurences of that invisible character with #. I want to do this for a set of... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashwin3086
16 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

XML file shows Junk Characters in UNIX

Hello sir, I have generated XML file from VS 2005. It works well in windows but it shows some junk characters in unix. Can any help me with this problem. Thank you in advance. Hema (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: hemavenkatesh
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to grep junk characters in a file

hi guys, I am generating a file from datastage (an etl tool). Now the file is having some junk characters like ( Á,L´±,ñ and so on).. I want to use the grep function to figure out all the junk characters and their location. Can somebody help me out in finding it out.. if possible i... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mac4rfree
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Handling Junk Characters

Urgently ur help is needed. Actually my req is i have an input file, that input file may have junk characters (^M, ^Z) etc... eg: cat file name abc^Z addres name2 msdmskd^Z address2 I want to validate the record and display where exactly this junk character resides. I want to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: help_scr_seeker
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Junk characters in mailx output

I have script which send a mail with top output. The script look like $ cat health.sh #!/bin/sh maillist="email address" rm /home/rtq1/file top -n 1 | head 15 > file cat file | mailx -s "Daily Health Report from `hostname` ..." "${maillist}" But now i am getting some junk characters along... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Renjesh
1 Replies

8. Solaris

Junk characters in Solaris 11

Hi, I rebooted a Solaris 11 box and after that date stamp is coming in junk in almost all directories. root@tstilp05 # ls -l total 112 drwxrwxr-x 9 root sys 19 juin 1 03:10 adm drwxr-xr-x 6 root sys 6 sept. 19 2012 ai drwxr-xr-x 3 root bin ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

To check Blank Lines, Blank Records and Junk Characters in a File

Hi All Need Help I have a file with the below format (ABC.TXT) : ®¿¿ABCDHEJJSJJ|XCBJSKK01|M|7348974982790 HDFLJDKJSKJ|KJALKSD02|M|7378439274898 KJHSAJKHHJJ|LJDSAJKK03|F|9898982039999 (cont......) I need to write a script where it will check for : blank lines (between rows,before... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: chatwithsaurav
6 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Need to remove Junk characters

Hi All, I have a issue that we are getting Junk characters from source and i am not able to load that records to Database. Line breakers Junk Characters (Â and different every time) Japanese Characters Every time I am using grep command and awk -F "\007" to find them and delete that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: spradeep86
1 Replies
Boulder::Stream(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Boulder::Stream(3pm)

NAME
Boulder::Stream - Read and write tag/value data from an input stream SYNOPSIS
#!/bin/perl # Read a series of People records from STDIN. # Add an "Eligible" tag to all those whose # Age >= 35 and Friends list includes "Fred" use Boulder::Stream; # filestream way: my $stream = Boulder::Stream->newFh; while ( my $record = <$stream> ) { next unless $record->Age >= 35; my @friends = $record->Friends; next unless grep {$_ eq 'Fred'} @friends; $record->insert(Eligible => 'yes'); print $stream $record; } # object oriented way: my $stream = Boulder::Stream->new; while (my $record = $stream->get ) { next unless $record->Age >= 35; my @friends = $record->Friends; next unless grep {$_ eq 'Fred'} @friends; $record->insert(Eligible => 'yes'); print $stream $record; } DESCRIPTION
Boulder::Stream provides stream-oriented access to Boulder IO hierarchical tag/value data. It can be used in a magic tied filehandle mode, as shown in the synopsis, or in object-oriented mode. Using tied filehandles, Stone objects are read from input using the standard <> operator. Stone objects printed to the tied filehandle appear on the output stream in Boulder format. By default, data is read from the magic ARGV filehandle (STDIN or a list of files provided on the command line) and written to STDOUT. This can be changed to the filehandles of your choice. Pass through behavior When using the object-oriented form of Boulder::Stream, tags which aren't specifically requested by the get() method are passed through to output unchanged. This allows pipes of programs to be constructed easily. Most programs will want to put the tags back into the boulder stream once they're finished, potentially adding their own. Of course some programs will want to behave differently. For example, a database query program will generate but not read a boulderio stream, while a report generator will read but not write the stream. This convention allows the following type of pipe to be set up: query_database | find_vector | find_dups | | blast_sequence | pick_primer | mail_report If all the programs in the pipe follow the conventions, then it will be possible to interpose other programs, such as a repetitive element finder, in the middle of the pipe without disturbing other components. SKELETON BOULDER PROGRAM
Here is a skeleton example. #!/bin/perl use Boulder::Stream; my $stream = Boulder::Stream->newFh; while ( my $record = <$stream> ) { next unless $record->Age >= 35; my @friends = $record->Friends; next unless grep {$_ eq 'Fred'} @friends; $record->insert(Eligible => 'yes'); print $stream $record; } The code starts by creating a Boulder::Stream object to handle the I/O. It reads from the stream one record at a time, returning a Stone object. We recover the Age and Friends tags, and continue looping unless the Age is greater or equal to 35, and the list of Friends contains "Fred". If these criteria match, then we insert a new tag named Eligible and print the record to the stream. The output may look like this: Name=Janice Age=36 Eligible=yes Friends=Susan Friends=Fred Friends=Ralph = Name=Ralph Age=42 Eligible=yes Friends=Janice Friends=Fred = Name=Susan Age=35 Eligible=yes Friends=Susan Friends=Fred = Note that in this case only records that meet the criteria are echoed to standard output. The object-oriented version of the program looks like this: #!/bin/perl use Boulder::Stream; my $stream = Boulder::Stream->new; while ( my $record = $stream->get('Age','Friends') ) { next unless $record->Age >= 35; my @friends = $record->Friends; next unless grep {$_ eq 'Fred'} @friends; $record->insert(Eligible => 'yes'); $stream->put($record); } The get() method is used to fetch Stones containing one or more of the indicated tags. The put() method is used to send the result to standard output. The pass-through behavior might produce a set of records like this one: Name=Janice Age=36 Eligible=yes Friends=Susan Friends=Fred Friends=Ralph = Name=Phillip Age=30 = Name=Ralph Age=42 Eligible=yes Friends=Janice Friends=Fred = Name=Barbara Friends=Agatha Friends=Janice = Name=Susan Age=35 Eligible=yes Friends=Susan Friends=Fred = Notice that there are now two records ("Phillip" and "Barbara") that do not contain the Eligible tag. Boulder::Stream METHODS $stream = Boulder::Stream->new(*IN,*OUT) $stream = Boulder::Stream->new(-in=>*IN,-out=>*OUT) The new() method creates a new Boulder::Stream object. You can provide input and output filehandles. If you leave one or both undefined new() will default to standard input or standard output. You are free to use files, pipes, sockets, and other types of file handles. You may provide the filehandle arguments as bare words, globs, or glob refs. You are also free to use the named argument style shown in the second heading. $fh = Boulder::Stream->newFh(-in=>*IN, -out=>*OUT) Returns a filehandle object tied to a Boulder::Stream object. Reads on the filehandle perform a get(). Writes invoke a put(). To retrieve the underlying Boulder::Stream object, call Perl's built-in tied() function: $stream = tied $fh; $stone = $stream->get(@taglist) @stones = $stream->get(@taglist) Every time get() is called, it will return a new Stone object. The Stone will be created from the input stream, using just the tags provided in the argument list. Pass no tags to receive whatever tags are present in the input stream. If none of the tags that you specify are in the current boulder record, you will receive an empty Stone. At the end of the input stream, you will receive undef. If called in an array context, get() returns a list of all stones from the input stream that contain one or more of the specified tags. $stone = $stream->read_record(@taglist) Identical to get(>, but the name is longer. $stream->put($stone) Write a Stone to the output filehandle. $stream->write_record($stone) Identical to put(), but the name is longer. Useful State Variables in a Boulder::Stream Every Boulder::Stream has several state variables that you can adjust. Fix them in this fashion: $a = new Boulder::Stream; $a->{delim}=':'; $a->{record_start}='['; $a->{record_end}=']'; $a->{passthru}=undef; o delim This is the delimiter character between tags and values, "=" by default. o record_start This is the start of nested record character, "{" by default. o record_end This is the end of nested record character, "}" by default. o passthru This determines whether unrecognized tags should be passed through from the input stream to the output stream. This is 'true' by default. Set it to undef to override this behavior. BUGS
Because the delim, record_start and record_end characters in the Boulder::Stream object are used in optimized (once-compiled) pattern matching, you cannot change these values once get() has once been called. To change the defaults, you must create the Boulder::Stream, set the characters, and only then begin reading from the input stream. For the same reason, different Boulder::Stream objects cannot use different delimiters. AUTHOR
Lincoln D. Stein <lstein@cshl.org>, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY. This module can be used and distributed on the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
Boulder, Boulder::Blast, Boulder::Genbank, Boulder::Medline, Boulder::Unigene, Boulder::Omim, Boulder::SwissProt perl v5.10.1 2001-06-11 Boulder::Stream(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:04 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy