I have a question. Take the following statement
awk -F\| '{print $21}' testfile | sed 's/\//\\/g' > newfile
This will grab the 21st column of a | delimited text file, replace the forward slashes "/" , with back slashes "\", and redirect the output newfile. Now, how do I get the output... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I am new to shell scripting. I want to optimize my one of the script.
I have one file and i want to remove selected zones for domains from that file.In this file i have almost 3500 zones for domains.Sample data for the file....
named.backup... (0 Replies)
Hi.
I'm going to learn scripting and i have the following topics on the list: sed, awk, shell scripting, perl.
My question is, whehter i should learn sed and awk? Aren't this tools outdated?
Although i see that GNU upgrade it's versions of these tools from time to time.
And, the next... (9 Replies)
Hello,
Despite reading the Pattern Matching chapter in the O'Reilly Sed & Awk book several times and
looking at numerous examples, I cannot seem to get any kind of conditional script to work in my awk scripts!
I am able to do the basic awk and grep script to capture the data but when I do with... (0 Replies)
I have large number of data files, close to 300 files, lets say all files are same kind and have extension .dat , each file have mulitple lines in it.
There is a unique line in each file containing string 'SERVER'. Right after this line there is another line which contain a string 'DIGIT=0',... (4 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am studying SED and AWK text processing commands with an E-book. I am not satisfied with the way of explanation and examples given by them.
I would like you guys to suggest me the Best book for SED and AWK to become good in this utility.
Thanks in Advance (1 Reply)
string="din&esh\nisgood"
File.txt:
the name is
sed "s#\#${string}#g" File.txt
Output am getting:
the name is dinesh
is good
Expected output:
the name is din&esh\nisgood
The input string is dynamic it will be keep on changing
am able to handle & by placing \& in the string.. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dineshaila
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
cut
CUT(1) BSD General Commands Manual CUT(1)NAME
cut -- select portions of each line of a file
SYNOPSIS
cut -b list [-n] [file ...]
cut -c list [file ...]
cut -f list [-d delim] [-s] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The cut utility selects portions of each line (as specified by list) from each file and writes them to the standard output. If the file
argument is a single dash ('-') or no file arguments were specified, lines are read from the standard input. The items specified by list can
be in terms of column position or in terms of fields delimited by a special character. Column numbering starts from 1.
list is a comma or whitespace separated set of increasing numbers and/or number ranges. Number ranges consist of a number, a dash (-), and a
second number and select the fields or columns from the first number to the second, inclusive. Numbers or number ranges may be preceded by a
dash, which selects all fields or columns from 1 to the first number. Numbers or number ranges may be followed by a dash, which selects all
fields or columns from the last number to the end of the line. Numbers and number ranges may be repeated, overlapping, and in any order. It
is not an error to select fields or columns not present in the input line.
The options are as follows:
-b list The list specifies byte positions.
-c list The list specifies character positions.
-d string Use the first character of string as the field delimiter character. The default is the <TAB> character.
-f list The list specifies fields, separated by the field delimiter character. The selected fields are output, separated by the field
delimiter character.
-n Do not split multi-byte characters.
-s Suppresses lines with no field delimiter characters. Unless specified, lines with no delimiters are passed through unmodified.
EXIT STATUS
cut exits 0 on success, 1 if an error occurred.
SEE ALSO paste(1)STANDARDS
The cut utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2'').
BSD December 21, 2008 BSD