I would like to extract one or two fields of a line.
At the moment, I am extracting the first field of a line:
The line can have two or three fields delimited with a dot.
if three fields, I want to be able to get the first two
ie if line = X.Y.Z
output X.Y
if two fields, I want to be able to get the first one only.
ie if line = X.Y
output X
I want to cut two coloums simulatiously and paste in some other file
for ex:
cut d ' ' -f3 -f4 xxx | paste yyy - > zzz;
from the above i want to cut two fileds 3 and 4 and paste as last coloums of single file (zzz).
how to solve this
regards
rajan (1 Reply)
I have a tab delimited file which has 90 fields and 15 million rows approximately...
I need to cut the first 78 fields only and I am using the
cut -f1-78 <filename> <outputfile>
It is taking a lot of time...
Is there a faster way of doing this? Can we use NAWK to gain better... (0 Replies)
I have a text:
dsj khfksjdh <time> EST 2006
ab cgnr jkkjt <time> EST 2006
gfhdgjghg <time> EST 2006
fkdjh kjhsekjrh kdjhfkh jhdfkhfdkjh kjdf <time> EST 2006
In the above file i need to extract time from every line... which is always the third from the last... Pls help!
Cheers,
Bouren (4 Replies)
I'm working on formatting some attendance data to meet a vendors requirements to upload to their system. With some help on the forums here, I have the data close. But they've since changed what they want.
The vendor wants me to submit three fields to them. Field 1 is the studentid field,... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have data in following format.
10001, John, Daves, Architecture, -2219
10002, Jim, Cirners, Businessman, -2219
1003, Tom, Katch, Engineer, -14003
I want to select the last column of the above given file and paste it on a different file in the following manner.
File TEST column... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a code where the file is a pipe delimited and I would need to extract the 2nd part of field2 if it is "ATTN", "C/O" or "%" and check to see if field9 is populated or not. If field9 is already populated then leave it as is but if field9 is not populated then take the 2nd part of... (3 Replies)
cat fileanme.txt
custom1=, custom2=, userPulseId=3005, accountPolicyId=1, custom3=, custom4=, homeLocationId=0, i need to make the fields appear in next line based on identifier (,) ie comma
so output should read
cat fileanme.txt
custom1=,
custom2=,
userPulseId=3005,
... (8 Replies)
I'm having bother getting both lines contained in a file to output as the same value.
A simple example:
john:123456:123:456:doe
john:123456:123:doe
cut -d: -f1,4 input file
john:456
john:doe ^ first line should be same as second.
trick one for me, i know why it's because of the... (4 Replies)
I am new to cut and I want to use the field option with a space delimiter on an Apache log file.
For example, if I wanted to find the 200 HTTP code using cut in this manner on the file below
cat access_abc.log | cut -d' ' -f7 | grep "200"
157.55.39.183 - - "GET /content/696-news041305... (4 Replies)
I'm a complete beginner in UNIX (and not a computer science student either), just undergoing a tutoring course. Trying to replicate the instructions on my own I directed output of the ls listing command (lists all files of my home directory ) to My_dir.tsv file (see the screenshot) to make use of... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: scrutinizerix
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
uniq
UNIQ(1) BSD General Commands Manual UNIQ(1)NAME
uniq -- report or filter out repeated lines in a file
SYNOPSIS
uniq [-cdu] [-f fields] [-s chars] [input_file [output_file]]
DESCRIPTION
The uniq utility reads the standard input comparing adjacent lines, and writes a copy of each unique input line to the standard output. The
second and succeeding copies of identical adjacent input lines are not written. Repeated lines in the input will not be detected if they are
not adjacent, so it may be necessary to sort the files first.
The following options are available:
-c Precede each output line with the count of the number of times the line occurred in the input, followed by a single space.
-d Don't output lines that are not repeated in the input.
-f fields
Ignore the first fields in each input line when doing comparisons. A field is a string of non-blank characters separated from adja-
cent fields by blanks. Field numbers are one based, i.e. the first field is field one.
-s chars
Ignore the first chars characters in each input line when doing comparisons. If specified in conjunction with the -f option, the
first chars characters after the first fields fields will be ignored. Character numbers are one based, i.e. the first character is
character one.
-u Don't output lines that are repeated in the input.
If additional arguments are specified on the command line, the first such argument is used as the name of an input file, the second is used
as the name of an output file.
The uniq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
COMPATIBILITY
The historic +number and -number options have been deprecated but are still supported in this implementation.
SEE ALSO sort(1)STANDARDS
The uniq utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
BSD January 6, 2007 BSD