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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Sorting data and place them in different folders Post 302194980 by Vinaykumar1 on Wednesday 14th of May 2008 05:26:10 AM
Old 05-14-2008
Hello Shiva,

Its giving an error :
awk: syntax error near line 1
awk: bailing out near line 1

Also as you have said,
awk '$1=="AAA" print { $0 ;}' Number.dat > AAA.dat

awk '$1=="BBB" print { $0 ;}' Number.dat > BBB.dat

If I am correct, need to give these scripts seperately.

I have some concerns,
I dont want to run thro' number.dat repeatedly. I am planning to make a script that allows to sort and move data to respective files without traversing thro' it again and again.

Kindly assist if possible,


Thanks and regards,
Vinay
 

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GSL-HISTOGRAM(1)					      General Commands Manual						  GSL-HISTOGRAM(1)

NAME
gsl-histogram - compute histogram of data on stdin SYNOPSYS
gsl-histogram xmin xmax [n] DESCRIPTION
gsl-histogram is a demonstration program for the GNU Scientific Library. It takes three arguments, specifying the upper and lower bounds of the histogram and the number of bins. It then reads numbers from `stdin', one line at a time, and adds them to the histogram. When there is no more data to read it prints out the accumulated histogram using gsl_histogram_fprintf. If n is unspecified then bins of inte- ger width are used. EXAMPLE
Here is an example. We generate 10000 random samples from a Cauchy distribution with a width of 30 and histogram them over the range -100 to 100, using 200 bins. gsl-randist 0 10000 cauchy 30 | gsl-histogram -100 100 200 > histogram.dat A plot of the resulting histogram will show the familiar shape of the Cauchy distribution with fluctuations caused by the finite sample size. awk '{print $1, $3 ; print $2, $3}' histogram.dat | graph -T X SEE ALSO
gsl(3), gsl-randist(1). AUTHOR
gsl-histogram was written by Brian Gough. Copyright 1996-2000; for copying conditions see the GNU General Public Licence. This manual page was added by the Dirk Eddelbuettel <edd@debian.org>, the Debian GNU/Linux maintainer for GSL. GNU
GSL-HISTOGRAM(1)
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