Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Extracting specific block
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Extracting specific block Post 302170381 by joeyg on Monday 25th of February 2008 12:15:41 PM
Old 02-25-2008
Hammer & Screwdriver string vs. numeric comparisons

if count = 7172; then
>>>that is a string comparison

if count -eq 7172; then
>>>that is a numeric comparison

I think you would want the numeric comparison.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Extracting specific info from finger command

Hello all, my unix is bash based and the finger command output is: Login Name Tty Idle LoginTime Office amos.john Amos John pts/26 1 Dec 5 16:18 (77.100.22.07) What am trying to achieve is extract the Login (amos.john) and Name (Amos John) from this output without using awk or sed. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: franny
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting specific text from a file

Dear All, I have to extract a a few lines from a log file and I know the starting String and end string(WHich is same ). Is there any simplere way using sed - awk. e.g. from the following file -------------------------------------- Some text Date: 21 Oct 2008 Text to be extracted... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahulkav
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting text out of specific lines

Hi, I have a file like LAHORE 2009-04-16 16:04:19 THU S5830 FAULT MESSAGE SUPPRESS STATUS LOC : ASP00 STS : SUPPRESSING CONTINUE INF : F6201 TRUNK. DATA FAULT REPORT COMPLETED LAHORE 2009-04-16 16:04:20 THU S8400 ISUP SIGNALLING TRACE -... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krabu
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

extracting specific lines from a file

hi all, i searched in unix.com and accquired the following commands for extracting specific lines from a file .. sed -n '16482,16482p' in.sql > out.sql awk 'NR>=10&&NR<=20' in.sql > out.sql.... these commands are working fine if i give the line numbers as such .. but if i pass a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sais
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

extracting specific text from lines

Hello, i've got this output text: and i need it to look something like this: which means that there won't be absolute path of each directory, just it's size and the last word after last '/' in each line, and i also don't need last line '1.7M /tmp' Looks like there is a simple... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: krater559
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting Tag along with specific lines

I have this input file: and the desired output is as follows: Desired Output This is a sample taken from a huge file. Basically, the script should take the tag (TDK11..1>) add everything that has bukle=A until it sees the blank lines. Then takes the next tag (TDK2222>) adds everything that... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ernst
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting specific rows

Hi all..... I have a file which contains large data...like I want to print the rows starting from "pixel" till the file read the letter "TER" into a new output file.... can anyone plz help in doing this ?? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: CAch
5 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Filtering data -extracting specific lines

I have a table to data which one of the columns include string of text from within that, I am searching to include few lines but not others for example I want to to include some combination of word address such as (address.| address? |the address | your address) but not (ip address | email... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: A-V
17 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting content from a file in specific format

Hi All, I have the file in this format **** Results Data **** Time or Step 1 2 20 0.000000000e+00 0s 0s 0s 1.024000000e+00 Us 0s 0s 1.100000000e+00 1s 0s 0s 1.100000001e+00 1s 0s 1s 2.024000000e+00 Us Us 1s 2.024000001e+00 ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: diehard
7 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Add a block of code at the end of a specific block

I need to search for a block with the starting pattern say "tabId": "table_1", and ending pattern say "]" and then add a few lines before "]" "block1":"block_111" "tabId": "table_1", "title":"My title" ..... .... }] how do I achieve it using awk and sed. Thanks, Lakshmi (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lakshmikumari
3 Replies
mathop(n)						Tcl Mathematical Operator Commands						 mathop(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
mathop - Mathematical operators as Tcl commands SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.5 ::tcl::mathop::! number ::tcl::mathop::~ number ::tcl::mathop::+ ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::- number ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::* ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::/ number ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::% number number ::tcl::mathop::** ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::& ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::| ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::^ ?number ...? ::tcl::mathop::<< number number ::tcl::mathop::>> number number ::tcl::mathop::== ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::!= arg arg ::tcl::mathop::< ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::<= ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::>= ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::> ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::eq ?arg ...? ::tcl::mathop::ne arg arg ::tcl::mathop::in arg list ::tcl::mathop::ni arg list _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The commands in the ::tcl::mathop namespace implement the same set of operations as supported by the expr command. All are exported from the namespace, but are not imported into any other namespace by default. Note that renaming, reimplementing or deleting any of the commands in the namespace does not alter the way that the expr command behaves, and nor does defining any new commands in the ::tcl::mathop names- pace. The following operator commands are supported: ~ ! + - * / % ** & | ^ >> << == eq != ne < <= > >= in ni MATHEMATICAL OPERATORS The behaviors of the mathematical operator commands are as follows: ! boolean Returns the boolean negation of boolean, where boolean may be any numeric value or any other form of boolean value (i.e. it returns truth if the argument is falsity or zero, and falsity if the argument is truth or non-zero). + ?number ...? Returns the sum of arbitrarily many arguments. Each number argument may be any numeric value. If no arguments are given, the result will be zero (the summation identity). - number ?number ...? If only a single number argument is given, returns the negation of that numeric value. Otherwise returns the number that results when all subsequent numeric values are subtracted from the first one. All number arguments must be numeric values. At least one argument must be given. * ?number ...? Returns the product of arbitrarily many arguments. Each number may be any numeric value. If no arguments are given, the result will be one (the multiplicative identity). / number ?number ...? If only a single number argument is given, returns the reciprocal of that numeric value (i.e. the value obtained by dividing 1.0 by that value). Otherwise returns the number that results when the first numeric argument is divided by all subsequent numeric argu- ments. All number arguments must be numeric values. At least one argument must be given. Note that when the leading values in the list of arguments are integers, integer division will be used for those initial steps (i.e. the intermediate results will be as if the functions floor and int are applied to them, in that order). If all values in the opera- tion are integers, the result will be an integer. % number number Returns the integral modulus of the first argument with respect to the second. Each number must have an integral value. Note that Tcl defines this operation exactly even for negative numbers, so that the following equality holds true: (x / y) * y == x - (x % y) ** ?number ...? Returns the result of raising each value to the power of the result of recursively operating on the result of processing the follow- ing arguments, so "** 2 3 4" is the same as "** 2 [** 3 4]". Each number may be any numeric value, though the second number must not be fractional if the first is negative. If no arguments are given, the result will be one, and if only one argument is given, the result will be that argument. The result will have an integral value only when all arguments are integral values. COMPARISON OPERATORS The behaviors of the comparison operator commands (most of which operate preferentially on numeric arguments) are as follows: == ?arg ...? Returns whether each argument is equal to the arguments on each side of it in the sense of the expr == operator (i.e., numeric com- parison if possible, exact string comparison otherwise). If fewer than two arguments are given, this operation always returns a true value. eq ?arg ...? Returns whether each argument is equal to the arguments on each side of it using exact string comparison. If fewer than two argu- ments are given, this operation always returns a true value. != arg arg Returns whether the two arguments are not equal to each other, in the sense of the expr != operator (i.e., numeric comparison if possible, exact string comparison otherwise). ne arg arg Returns whether the two arguments are not equal to each other using exact string comparison. < ?arg ...? Returns whether the arbitrarily-many arguments are ordered, with each argument after the first having to be strictly more than the one preceding it. Comparisons are performed preferentially on the numeric values, and are otherwise performed using UNICODE string comparison. If fewer than two arguments are present, this operation always returns a true value. When the arguments are numeric but should be compared as strings, the string compare command should be used instead. <= ?arg ...? Returns whether the arbitrarily-many arguments are ordered, with each argument after the first having to be equal to or more than the one preceding it. Comparisons are performed preferentially on the numeric values, and are otherwise performed using UNICODE string comparison. If fewer than two arguments are present, this operation always returns a true value. When the arguments are numeric but should be compared as strings, the string compare command should be used instead. > ?arg ...? Returns whether the arbitrarily-many arguments are ordered, with each argument after the first having to be strictly less than the one preceding it. Comparisons are performed preferentially on the numeric values, and are otherwise performed using UNICODE string comparison. If fewer than two arguments are present, this operation always returns a true value. When the arguments are numeric but should be compared as strings, the string compare command should be used instead. >= ?arg ...? Returns whether the arbitrarily-many arguments are ordered, with each argument after the first having to be equal to or less than the one preceding it. Comparisons are performed preferentially on the numeric values, and are otherwise performed using UNICODE string comparison. If fewer than two arguments are present, this operation always returns a true value. When the arguments are numeric but should be compared as strings, the string compare command should be used instead. BIT-WISE OPERATORS The behaviors of the bit-wise operator commands (all of which only operate on integral arguments) are as follows: ~ number Returns the bit-wise negation of number. Number may be an integer of any size. Note that the result of this operation will always have the opposite sign to the input number. & ?number ...? Returns the bit-wise AND of each of the arbitrarily many arguments. Each number must have an integral value. If no arguments are given, the result will be minus one. | ?number ...? Returns the bit-wise OR of each of the arbitrarily many arguments. Each number must have an integral value. If no arguments are given, the result will be zero..TP ^ ?number ...? Returns the bit-wise XOR of each of the arbitrarily many arguments. Each number must have an integral value. If no arguments are given, the result will be zero. << number number Returns the result of bit-wise shifting the first argument left by the number of bits specified in the second argument. Each number must have an integral value. >> number number Returns the result of bit-wise shifting the first argument right by the number of bits specified in the second argument. Each number must have an integral value. LIST OPERATORS The behaviors of the list-oriented operator commands are as follows: in arg list Returns whether the value arg is present in the list list (according to exact string comparison of elements). ni arg list Returns whether the value arg is not present in the list list (according to exact string comparison of elements). EXAMPLES
The simplest way to use the operators is often by using namespace path to make the commands available. This has the advantage of not affecting the set of commands defined by the current namespace. namespace path {::tcl::mathop ::tcl::mathfunc} # Compute the sum of some numbers set sum [+ 1 2 3] # Compute the average of a list set list {1 2 3 4 5 6} set mean [/ [+ {*}$list] [double [llength $list]]] # Test for list membership set gotIt [in 3 $list] # Test to see if a value is within some defined range set inRange [<= 1 $x 5] # Test to see if a list is sorted set sorted [<= {*}$list] SEE ALSO
expr(n), mathfunc(n), namespace(n) KEYWORDS
command, expression, operator Tcl 8.5 mathop(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:51 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy