Hi,
I want to insert data from one file to another file. My requirement goes this way:
I have a file1 with data as:
12345
43534
56678
23545
12343
and so on...
I have a file2 with data as:
name1:abc:12:9999
name2:ght:1:9999
name3:wrt:17:9999
name3:erc:22:9999
name4:xyz:16:9999
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i willbe very much grateful to u if u help me out..
if i simply connect pbx machine to printer by serial port RS232 then we find this view:
But i want to capture this data into database automatically when the pbx is running.The table in database will contain similar to this view inthe... (1 Reply)
how to concatenate particular string in each line of a file..
root$cat conf
check_11043
heartbeat_4345
----------
if i want to add the string "done" output of the file should be
check_11043 done
heartbeat_4345 done (1 Reply)
I am having difficulty with the following script:
#! /bin/bash
filelist=~/data/${1}*
~/./convertFile $filelist ~/temp/outputEssentially, there are a large number of files in the directory ~/data, each with a four-letter code at the beginning (eg. aaaa001 aaaa002 bbbb001 bbbb002 etc). The... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I have a problem to concatenate the lines based on number of delimiters (if the delimiter count is 9 then concatenate all the fields & remove the new line char bw delimiters and then write the following data into second line) in a file.
my input file content is
Title| ID| Owner|... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a data file with :
01/28/2012,1,1,98995
01/28/2012,1,2,7195
01/29/2012,1,1,98995
01/29/2012,1,2,7195
01/30/2012,1,1,98896
01/30/2012,1,2,7083
01/31/2012,1,1,98896
01/31/2012,1,2,7083
02/01/2012,1,1,98896
02/01/2012,1,2,7083
02/02/2012,1,1,98899
02/02/2012,1,2,7083
I... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am trying to merge to 2 files 348.csv & 349.csv using join,awk commands but not getting proper output:
cat 348.csv
Timestamp Server
348
02/04/2013 09:19 100
02/04/2013 09:20 250
02/04/2013 09:21 80
cat... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: ss_ss
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
uuencode
uuencode(n) encode/decoding a binary file uuencode(n)
NAME
uuencode - encode/decoding a binary file
SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8
package require uuencode ?1.0.1?
::uuencode::encode string
::uuencode::decode string
::uuencode::uuencode ?-name string? ?-mode octal? (-file filename | ?--? string)
::uuencode::uudecode (-file filename | ?--? string)
DESCRIPTION
This package provides a Tcl-only implementation of the uuencode(1) and uudecode(1) commands. This encoding packs binary data into printable
ASCII characters.
::uuencode::encode string
returns the uuencoded data. This will encode all the data passed in even if this is longer than the uuencode maximum line length. If
the number of input bytes is not a multiple of 3 then additional 0 bytes are added to pad the string.
::uuencode::decode string
Decodes the given encoded data. This will return any padding characters as well and it is the callers responsibility to deal with
handling the actual length of the encoded data. (see uuencode).
::uuencode::uuencode ?-name string? ?-mode octal? (-file filename | ?--? string)
::uuencode::uudecode (-file filename | ?--? string)
UUDecode a file or block of data. A file may contain more than one embedded file so the result is a list where each element is a
three element list of filename, mode value and data.
OPTIONS -filename name
Cause the uuencode or uudecode commands to read their data from the named file rather that taking a string parameter.
-name string
The uuencoded data header line contains the suggested file name to be used when unpacking the data. Use this option to change this
from the default of "data.dat".
-mode octal
The uuencoded data header line contains a suggested permissions bit pattern expressed as an octal string. To change the default of
0644 you can set this option. For instance, 0755 would be suitable for an executable. See chmod(1).
EXAMPLES
% set d [uuencode::encode "Hello World!"]
2&5L;&@5V]R;&0A
% uuencode::uudecode $d
Hello World!
% set d [uuencode::uuencode -name hello.txt "Hello World"]
begin 644 hello.txt
+2&5L;&@5V]R;&0`
`
end
% uuencode::uudecode $d
{hello.txt 644 {Hello World}}
KEYWORDS
encoding, uuencode
base64 1.0.1 uuencode(n)