I have to compare records in two files. It can be done using gawk/awk but i am unable to do it. Please help me
File1
ABAAAAAB BC asa sa
ABAAABAA BC bsa sm
ABBBBAAA BC bxz sa
ABAAABAB BC csa sa
ABAAAAAA BC dsa sm
ABBBBAAB BC dxz sa
File 2
ABAAAAAB BC aas ba
ABAAAAAB BC asa sa... (6 Replies)
Hi.
I'm having trouble using gawk within a bash script and I can't figure out why.
I have a command that takes in a data file with two columns, the first one numbers and the second words. My code takes each line, and prints the word its corresponding number of times. The code works from the... (2 Replies)
Hi all
I’m looking for a perl equivalent to this command string
I need to imbed this in a existing perl script
cat file1 | gawk -F"|" '{print $1","$2,",",$3,",",$11 >> "new-file"}'
Thank you (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am using the script to print the portion of the file containing a particular string. But it is giving error "For Reading (No such file or directory). I am using cygwin as unix simulator.
cat TT35*.log | gawk -v search="12345678" '
/mSOriginating /,/disconnectingParty/ {
... (1 Reply)
People,
Ive been trying to make a script but i just cant figure it out.
Problem/ Case:
I have a logfile.txt that contains data. The only two things i need to filter on = $1 (date), $6 (errorcode).
In the script i am trying to make, u need to fill in a date. So he searches on that date... (11 Replies)
hi i've already created this script. When I execute the script it takes the argument and compares it to the 3rd column of the script. What I was wondering if I could get some help with is. I want to add another column to the script and it will be the result of a set number for example, (2000 - 3rd... (3 Replies)
Hi Unix.com !
I would need some help for something I don't understand :confused:
input:
111|2 Y Z blue.
333|4 W X blue.; 5 Y Z red.
666|7 W X red.; 8 Y Z blue.
999|10 U V red.; 11 W X blue.; 12 Y Z red.
From $2, I would like to remove the sub-strings containing "blue" (and the... (4 Replies)
Hi
I have strings like these :
Vengeance mitt
Men Vengeance gloves
Women Quatro Windstopper Etip gloves
Quatro Windstopper Etip gloves
Girls Thermobite hooded jacket
Thermobite Triclimate snow jacket
Boys Thermobite Triclimate snow jacket
and I would like to get the lower case words at... (2 Replies)
I am trying to use gawk to search a file and put the second value of the string into a string.
gawk -F: '$1~/CXFR/ {print $2}' go.dat
Below is the file 'go.dat'
====================
HOME :/
CTMP :/tmp
CUTL :/u/rdiiulio/bin
CWRK :/u/work
CXFR :/u/xfer
... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Thanks for answering my previous question. Could you please explain the highlighted code?
awk -v pos='9 27 39 54 59 64 71 78 83 103 108' 'BEGIN{split(pos,var)} {for (i in var) $0=gensub(/./,"|",var)} 1' test.txt | head
I understood that the split function splits the pos string into... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrcool4
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
docbook2gjots
DOCBOOK2GJOTS(1) General Commands Manual DOCBOOK2GJOTS(1)NAME
docbook2gjots - Convert a DOCBOOK file to gjots format (on stdout)
SYNOPSIS
docbook2gjots [ DOCBOOK-file ]
DESCRIPTION
docbook2gjots converts a DOCBOOK XML file into gjots format.
docbook2gjots uses gawk(1) to perform the conversion.
<preface>, <chapter>, <section>, <sect1>, <sect2>, <sect3> and <sect4> tags are used to define NewEntry and NewFolder boundaries. They
should definitely have <title> tags.
This is a quick and dirty hack using gawk(1) and does no formal checking of XML or SGML syntax nor does it validate against the DOCBOOK
DTD. Consequently, if the syntax of the file is broken the conversion will probably fail.
It is intended that a round-trip can be made so that gjots(1) can be used as a tool at all stages of DOCBOOK production - mainly as an out-
line processor to help the author organise and order the work. A document may well start its life in gjots(1) as the initial thoughts are
marshalled. As the document forms up, it can be converted to DOCBOOK with the following command which automatically adds tags such as
<?xml...>, <para> etc:
gjots2docbook -b file.gjots >file.xml
docbook2pdf file.xml
Or, starting with an existing DOCBOOK file:
docbook2gjots file.xml >file.gjots
In the latter case, the document will already have a lot of DOCBOOK tags so to convert back to docbook, add the -e and -p options:
gjots2docbook -b -p -e file.gjots >file.xml
docbook2pdf file.xml
AUTHOR
Written by Bob Hepple <bhepple@freeshell.org>
http://bhepple.freeshell.org/gjots
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2002 Robert Hepple
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PAR-
TICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO gjots(1), gjots2html(1), gjots2docbook(1)DOCBOOK2GJOTS(1)