Hi,
iam having the file as follows:
ABCDEFGH|0987654321234567
ABCDEFGH|0987654321234523
ABCDEFGH|0987654321234556
ABCDEFGH|0987654321234545
POIUYTRE|1234567890890678
POIUYTRE|1209867757352567
POIUYTRE|5463879088797131
POIUYTRE|5468980091344456
pls provide me the split command
... (14 Replies)
I want to compare some files.
say iam having 2 sets of files ,each is having some 10 files.
ie,
file1
1a.txt
1b.txt
1c.txt
...
file2
2a.txt
2b.txt
2c.txt
...
i need to read line by line of this files parralley..
ie.. i want to read file1 first line that is 1a.txt and file2... (2 Replies)
# set date to your spec: this is month/day/yr/hr/min/sec:
sysdate=`date '+%m/%d/%Y-%H:%M:%S'`
# get the last line before the history file is modified
tail -1 /tmp/hosthistory.txt |while read lastdate mydevices
do
echo $lastdate
echo $mydevices
done
LIST = 'ypcat hosts|| sort... (11 Replies)
Hi All,
How do I code a password with multiple special characters in it.
Example: password is P#utar&@
None of the belwo options worked
1. passwd="P#utar&@"
2. passwd='P#utar&@'
Any help will be greatly appreciated. (3 Replies)
I was trying out some new series to get it print
1
1 2
1 2 3
1 2 3 4
1 2 3 4 5
and the seond one is
1
2 2
3 3 3
4 4 4 4
5 5 5 5 5
but was unable to get the result. (5 Replies)
hi,
i am trying this while loop and i only want that it should only read food as pizza....no other entry should be taken here.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
$food = " ";
while ( $food ne 'pizza' )
{
print 'enter what you had last night: ';
chomp ($food = <STDIN>);
#print $food ;
}
... (2 Replies)
merge(1) General Commands Manual merge(1)NAME
merge - three-way file merge
SYNOPSIS
file1 file2 file3
DESCRIPTION
combines two files that are revisions of a single original file. The original file is file2, and the revised files are file1 and file3.
identifies all changes that lead from file2 to file3 and from file2 to file1, then deposits the merged text into file1. If the option is
used, the result goes to standard output instead of file1.
An overlap occurs if both file1 and file3 have changes in the same place. prints how many overlaps occurred, and includes both alterna-
tives in the result. The alternatives are delimited as follows:
lines in file1
lines in file3
If there are overlaps, edit the result in file1 and delete one of the alternatives.
This command is particularly useful for revision control, especially if file1 and file3 are the ends of two branches that have file2 as a
common ancestor.
EXAMPLES
A typical use for is as follows:
1. To merge an RCS branch into the trunk, first check out the three different versions from RCS (see co(1)) and rename them for
their revision numbers: 5.2, 5.11, and 5.2.3.3. File 5.2.3.3 is the end of an RCS branch that split off the trunk at file 5.2.
2. For this example, assume file 5.11 is the latest version on the trunk, and is also a revision of the "original" file, 5.2.
Merge the branch into the trunk with the command:
3. File 5.11 now contains all changes made on the branch and the trunk, and has markings in the file to show all overlapping
changes.
4. Edit file 5.11 to correct the overlaps, then use the command to check the file back in (see ci(1)).
WARNINGS
uses the ed(1) system editor. Therefore, the file size limits of ed(1) apply to
AUTHOR
was developed by Walter F. Tichy.
SEE ALSO diff3(1), diff(1), rcsmerge(1), co(1).
merge(1)