Could someone please help me with the following.
I'm trying to figure out how to delete two words within a specific file using sed.
The two words are directory and named.
I have tried the following:
sed '//d' sedfile
sed '//d' sedfile
both of these options do not work.....
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Could you please let me know, how to delete first 10 words from text files using vi?
10dw will delete it from current line, how to do it for all the lines from file?
Thanks (6 Replies)
I have an input text that looks like this (comes already sorted):
on Caturday 22 at 10:15, some event
on Caturday 22 at 10:15, some other event
on Caturday 22 at 21:30, even more events
on Funday 23 at 11:00, yet another event
I need to delete all the matching words between the lines, from... (2 Replies)
I'm hoping someone could help me out please :)
I have several .txt files with several hundred lines in each that look like this:
10241;</td><td>10241</td><td class="b">x2801;</td><td>2801</td><td>TEXT-1</td></tr>
10242;</td><td>10242</td><td... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I wanted to delete data between two words.
Input:
I read gihoihsahkjlk write goal hard read hsakdjhkh write work read hlkhlkhlkh write
Desired Output:
I write goal hard write work write
We have to replace the data that comes between 'read' and 'write' with... (3 Replies)
This is a Nagios situation.
So i have a list of servers in one file called Servers.txt
And in another file called hostgroups.cfg, i want to remove each and every one of the servers in the Servers.txt file.
The problem is, the script I wrote is having a problem removing the exact servers in... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to make an script using sed that removes everything between 'begin' (including the line that has it) and 'end1' or 'end2', not removing this line.
Let me paste an 2 examples:
anything before
any string begin
few lines of content
end1
anything after
anything before
any... (4 Replies)
I have a word file that looks like:
pens
binder
spiral
user
I want to delete all the words without the letter /s/, so output looks like:
pens
spiral
user
I tried using sed:
sed '//d' infile.txt > out.txt (5 Replies)
hi, i have a fasta file like this:
>contig00003 length=363 numreads=45 gene=isogroup00001 status=it_thresh
GATTTTTTACCCTGGGAGTGAGGAGGACGAGGTTGAGGATGAAGAAAAGAGAAAGATGAAGAGGTTGAGGATGTT
GTAGTCGGCGGTGGAATTAGGGGGAGCCGGCGAGCCCAAGTATTTTGCAGAGGTGTCTTCATCATCCAAACAACA... (3 Replies)
spell(1) General Commands Manual spell(1)Name
spell, spellin, spellout - check text for spelling errors
Syntax
spell [-v] [-b] [-x] [-d hlist] [+local-file] [-s hstop] [-h spellhist] [file...]
spellin [list]
spellout [-d] list
Description
The command collects words from the named documents, and looks them up in a spelling list. Words that are not on the spelling list and are
not derivable from words on the list (by applying certain inflections, prefixes or suffixes) are printed on the standard output. If no
files are specified, words are collected from the standard input.
The command ignores most and constructions.
Two routines help maintain the hash lists used by Both expect a set of words, one per line, from the standard input. The command combines
the words from the standard input and the preexisting list file and places a new list on the standard output. If no list file is speci-
fied, a new list is generated. The command looks up each word from the standard input and prints on the standard output those that are
missing from (or present on, with option -d) the hashed list file. For example, to verify that hookey is not on the default spelling list,
add it to your own private list, and then use it with
echo hookey | spellout /usr/dict/hlista
echo hookey | spellin /usr/dict/hlista > myhlist
spell -d myhlist <filename>
Options-v Displays words not found in spelling list with all plausible derivations from spelling list.
-b Checks data according to British spelling. Besides preferring centre, colour, speciality, travelled, this option insists
upon -ise instead of -ize in words like standardise.
-x Precedes each word with an equal sign (=) and displays all plausible derivations.
-d hlist Specifies the file used for the spelling list.
-h spellhist Specifies the file used as the history file.
-s hstop Specifies the file used for the stop list.
+local-file Removes words found in local-file from the output of the command. The argument local-file is the name of a file provided by
the user that contains a sorted list of words, one per line. With this option, the user can specify a list of words for a
particular job that are spelled correctly.
The auxiliary files used for the spelling list, stop list, and history file may be specified by arguments following the -d, -s, and -h
options. The default files are indicated below. Copies of all output may be accumulated in the history file. The stop list filters out
misspellings (for example, thier=thy-y+ier) that would otherwise pass.
Restrictions
The coverage of the spelling list is uneven; new installations will probably wish to monitor the output for several months to gather local
additions.
The command works only with ASCII text files.
Files
/usr/dict/hlist[ab] hashed spelling lists, American & British, default for -d
/usr/dict/hstop hashed stop list, default for -s
/dev/null history file, default for -h
/tmp/spell.$$* temporary files
/usr/lib/spell
See Alsoderoff(1), sed(1), sort(1), tee(1)spell(1)