Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Seperate contents in a file with | as delimiter Post 302160588 by risshanth on Tuesday 22nd of January 2008 07:02:48 AM
Old 01-22-2008
Seperate contents in a file with | as delimiter

Hi,

I do have a file with follwoing as contents:
816|817118|
816|933370|
816|1215241|

I want to store the above values into two arrays as follows:

arr1[] = { 816,816,816}
arr2[] = {817118,933370,1215241}

How it can be achieved ?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Split File into seperate files

Hi, So I have a text file which I want to separate into separate text files. I would use the split command but the problem here is that the text file is separated by delimiters. For example: blah blah blah ------ more text ----- and some more text So basically the first part should be... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: eltinator
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

seperate elements of a file

i want to write a script in Bash Shell that accept a list of files.an example of file is 4334:234 322.345:32 234:3452 e.t.c each file only contain lines like num1:num2 i want to count the lines of this file and find the summary of X=4334+322.345+234 and Y=234+32+3452 (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nektarios4u
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Script for parsing details in a log file to a seperate file

Hi Experts, Im a new bee for scripting, I would ned to do the following via linux shell scripting, I have an application which throws a log file, on each action of a particular work with the application, as sson as the action is done, the log file would vanish or stops updating there, the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pingnagan
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Seperate file content

hi all, i have some file whoes contents are 0 /home8/mc09ats/UnixCw/a1 1 /home8/mc09ats/UnixCw/a2 2 /home8/mc09ats/b3 3 /home8/mc09ats/UnixCw/d1 i want to seperate the content following way... fileindex= 0 filepath=... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: AbhijitIT
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

compare 2 file contents , if same delete 2nd file contents

Give shell script....which takes two file names as input and compares the contents, is both are same delete second file's contents..... I try with "diff"...... but confusion how to use "diff" with if ---else Thanking you (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: krishnampkkm
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

delimiter contents

Hi All, I have a file with contents : cat >file1.sh qw^A34^Aer the command i am using is: cut -f1,2,3 -d"^A" file1.sh which gave output as: qw^A34^Aer and the command cut -f2 -d"^A" file1.sh gave an output : A34 i need the output as : (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsandhya31
15 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace partial contents of file with contents read from other file

Hi, I am facing issue while reading data from a file in UNIX. my requirement is to compare two files and for the text pattern matching in the 1st file, replace the contents in second file by the contents of first file from start to the end and write the contents to thrid file. i am able to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: seeki
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script to put delimiter for a no delimiter variable length text file

Hi, I have a No Delimiter variable length text file with following schema - Column Name Data length Firstname 5 Lastname 5 age 3 phoneno1 10 phoneno2 10 phoneno3 10 sample data - ... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gaurav Martha
16 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Folder contents getting appended as strings while redirecting file contents to a variable

Hi one of the output of the command is as below # sed -n "/CCM-ResourceHealthCheck:/,/---------/{/CCM-ResourceHealthCheck:/d;/---------/d;p;}" Automation.OutputZ$zoneCounter | sed 's/$/<br>/' Resource List : <br> *************************** 1. row ***************************<br> ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vivek d r
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Code to change file delimiter (passed as argument) to bar delimiter

Hi, Extremely new to Perl scripting, but need a quick fix without using TEXT::CSV I need to read in a file, pass any delimiter as an argument, and convert it to bar delimited on the output. In addition, enclose fields within double quotes in case of any embedded delimiters. Any help would... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: JPB1977
2 Replies
Array::Compare(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Array::Compare(3pm)

NAME
Array::Compare - Perl extension for comparing arrays. SYNOPSIS
use Array::Compare; my $comp1 = Array::Compare->new; $comp->Sep('|'); $comp->Skip({3 => 1, 4 => 1}); $comp->WhiteSpace(0); $comp->Case(1); my $comp2 = Array::Compare->new(Sep => '|', WhiteSpace => 0, Case => 1, Skip => {3 => 1, 4 => 1}); my @arr1 = 0 .. 10; my @arr2 = 0 .. 10; $comp1->compare(@arr1, @arr2); $comp2->compare(@arr1, @arr2); DESCRIPTION
If you have two arrays and you want to know if they are the same or different, then Array::Compare will be useful to you. All comparisons are carried out via a comparator object. In the simplest usage, you can create and use a comparator object like this: my @arr1 = 0 .. 10; my @arr2 = 0 .. 10; my $comp = Array::Compare->new; if ($comp->compare(@arr1, @arr2)) { print "Arrays are the same "; } else { print "Arrays are different "; } Notice that you pass references to the two arrays to the comparison method. Internally the comparator compares the two arrays by using "join" to turn both arrays into strings and comparing the strings using "eq". In the joined strings, the elements of the original arrays are separated with the "^G" character. This can cause problems if your array data contains "^G" characters as it is possible that two different arrays can be converted to the same string. To avoid this, it is possible to override the default separator character, either by passing and alternative to the "new" function my $comp = Array::Compare->new(Sep => '|'); or by changing the seperator for an existing comparator object $comp->Sep('|'); In general you should choose a separator character that won't appear in your data. You can also control whether or not whitespace within the elements of the arrays should be considered significant when making the comparison. The default is that all whitespace is significant. The alternative is for all consecutive white space characters to be converted to a single space for the pruposes of the comparison. Again, this can be turned on when creating a comparator object: my $comp = Array::Compare->new(WhiteSpace => 0); or by altering an existing object: $comp->WhiteSpace(0); You can also control whether or not the case of the data is significant in the comparison. The default is that the case of data is taken into account. This can be changed in the standard ways when creating a new comparator object: my $comp = Array::Compare->new(Case => 0); or by altering an existing object: $comp->Case(0); In addition to the simple comparison described above (which returns true if the arrays are the same and false if they're different) there is also a full comparison which returns a list containing the indexes of elements which differ between the two arrays. If the arrays are the same it returns an empty list. In scalar context the full comparison returns the length of this list (i.e. the number of elements that differ). You can access the full comparision in two ways. Firstly, there is a "DefFull" attribute. If this is "true" then a full comparison if carried out whenever the "compare" method is called. my $comp = Array::Compare->new(DefFull => 1); $comp->compare(@arr1, @arr2); # Full comparison $comp->DefFull(0); $comp->compare(@arr1, @arr2); # Simple comparison $comp->DefFull(1); $comp->compare(@arr1, @arr2); # Full comparison again Secondly, you can access the full comparison method directly $comp->full_compare(@arr1, @arr2); For symmetry, there is also a direct method to use to call the simple comparison. $comp->simple_compare(@arr1, @arr2); The final complication is the ability to skip elements in the comparison. If you know that two arrays will always differ in a particular element but want to compare the arrays ignoring this element, you can do it with Array::Compare without taking array slices. To do this, a comparator object has an optional attribute called "Skip" which is a reference to a hash. The keys in this hash are the indexes of the array elements and the values should be any true value for elements that should be skipped. For example, if you want to compare two arrays, ignoring the values in elements two and four, you can do something like this: my %skip = (2 => 1, 4 => 1); my @a = (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5); my @b = (0, 1, X, 3, X, 5); my $comp = Array::Compare->new(Skip => \%skip); $comp->compare(@a, @b); This should return true, as we are explicitly ignoring the columns which differ. Of course, having created a comparator object with no skip hash, it is possible to add one later: $comp->Skip({1 => 1, 2 => 1}); or: my %skip = (1 => 1, 2 => 2); $comp->Skip(\%skip); To reset the comparator so that no longer skips elements, set the skip hash to an empty hash. $comp->Skip({}); You can also check to see if one array is a permutation of another, i.e. they contain the same elements but in a different order. if ($comp->perm(@a, @b) { print "Arrays are perms "; else { print "Nope. Arrays are completely different "; } In this case the values of "WhiteSpace" and "Case" are still used, but "Skip" is ignored for, hopefully, obvious reasons. METHODS
new [ %OPTIONS ] Constructs a new comparison object. Takes an optional hash containing various options that control how comparisons are carried out. Any omitted options take useful defaults. Sep This is the value that is used to separate fields when the array is joined into a string. It should be a value which doesn't appear in your data. Default is '^G'. WhiteSpace Flag that indicates whether or not whitespace is significant in the comparison. If this value is false then all multiple whitespace characters are changed into a single space before the comparison takes place. Default is 1 (whitespace is significant). Case Flag that indicates whther or not the case of the data should be significant in the comparison. Default is 1 (case is significant). Skip a reference to a hash which contains the numbers of any columns that should be skipped in the comparison. Default is an empty hash (all columns are significant). DefFull Flag which indicates whether the default comparison is simple (just returns true if the arrays are the same or false if they're not) or full (returns an array containing the indexes of the columns that differ). Default is 0 (simple comparison). compare_len @ARR1, @ARR2 Very simple comparison. Just checks the lengths of the arrays are the same. compare @ARR1, @ARR2 Compare the values in two arrays and return a data indicating whether the arrays are the same. The exact return values differ depending on the comparison method used. See the descriptions of simple_compare and full_compare for details. Uses the value of DefFull to determine which comparison routine to use. simple_compare @ARR1, @ARR2 Compare the values in two arrays and return a flag indicating whether or not the arrays are the same. Returns true if the arrays are the same or false if they differ. Uses the values of 'Sep', 'WhiteSpace' and 'Skip' to influence the comparison. full_compare @ARR1, @ARR2 Do a full comparison between two arrays. Checks each individual column. In scalar context returns the number of columns that differ (zero if the arrays are the same). In list context returns an list containing the indexes of the columns that differ (an empty list if the arrays are the same). Uses the values of 'Sep' and 'WhiteSpace' to influence the comparison. Note: If the two arrays are of different lengths then this method just returns the indexes of the elements that appear in one array but not the other (i.e. the indexes from the longer array that are beyond the end of the shorter array). This might be a little counter-intuitive. perm @ARR1, @ARR2 Check to see if one array is a permutation of the other (i.e. contains the same set of elements, but in a different order). We do this by sorting the arrays and passing references to the assorted versions to simple_compare. There are also some small changes to simple_compare as it should ignore the Skip hash if we are called from perm. AUTHOR
Dave Cross <dave@mag-sol.com> SEE ALSO
perl(1). COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2000-2005, Magnum Solutions Ltd. All Rights Reserved. This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2011-12-18 Array::Compare(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:39 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy