Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: text file editing
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting text file editing Post 302201945 by vgersh99 on Tuesday 3rd of June 2008 12:24:52 PM
Old 06-03-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by injeti
Hi, thanks a lot for your response, the solution provided by the moderator is really excellent, so I want to continue that, thanks a lot for your help
hmmmmmmm.... I don't follow.
Could post (again) a sample input and a desired output, pls.

radoulov Smilie
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Text Editing

Hello everybody, I have a sorted text file. some of the lines appear twice or even more. is there an unix utility that removes the extra appearences? Thanks, Ido. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ginodii
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Text editing on iPhone using ed

Hi all, I'm trying to edit a file using ed on an iphone. I am trying to edit a conf file and have managed to get to the directory where the default.conf file is located, however, when I type ed default.conf all i get is a number and then a blank line and a question mark which is why I am... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: drewcifer
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Text editing script does everything but edit text.

I wrote this script to create and edit a large number of websites based on a template site and a collection of text files which have the relevant strings in them delimited by colons. I run it and the shell doesn't produce any errors, but when it gets to the for loop where it actually has to edit... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: afroCluster
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Editing text using AWK

France : 40 : John Persia : 50 : John -----Database What i am trying to achieve is to search for a book, and replave the title with the new title echo -n "Title:" read Title echo -n "Author:" read Author echo "new Title" read NewTitle awk 'BEGIN {... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: gregarion
11 Replies

5. Programming

Editing a specific liine of text file - C++

Is there any way to erase all the contents of a specific line of a text file and then write something on it? e.g. test.txt.old: qwert asdfg zxcbv=0 test.txt.new qwerty asdfg hello=0 is this possible with C++ ?:confused: (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hakermania
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

editing line in text file adding number to value in file

I have a text file that has data like: Data "12345#22" Fred ID 12345 Age 45 Wilma Dino Data "123#22" Tarzan ID 123 Age 33 Jane I need to figure out a way of adding 1,000,000 to the specific lines (always same format) in the file, so it becomes: Data "1012345#22" Fred ID... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: say170
16 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help needed editing text file using the terminal

Hi, I have text file with the header like this tracking_id condition replicate FPKM XLOC_000001 alpha 1 10.3199 XLOC_000001 alpha 0 10.3686 XLOC_000001 alpha 2 15.5619 ... With the first column being genes, the second being the condition, the third... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: 4galaxy7
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Convert vi editing to text editing

Dear Guru's I'm using Putty and want to edit a file. I know we generally use vi editor to do it. As I'm not good in using vi editor, I want to convert the vi into something like text pad. Is there any option in Putty to do the same ? Thanks for your response. Srini (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: thummi9090
6 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Editing long text file

Good morning all, I have a machine running IRIX and I need to edit a text file on the terminal that is literally thousands of lines. Does anyone know the most efficient way to edit portions of files like these? Obviously simply using the vi command isn't going to work since I get a too many lines... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: James C
1 Replies
rawtopgm(1)						      General Commands Manual						       rawtopgm(1)

NAME
rawtopgm - convert raw grayscale bytes into a portable graymap SYNOPSIS
rawtopgm [-bpp [1|2]] [-littleendian] [-maxval N] [-headerskip N] [-rowskip N] [-tb|-topbottom] [width height] [imagefile] DESCRIPTION
Reads raw grayscale values as input. Produces a PGM file as output. The input file is just a sequence of pure binary numbers, either one or two bytes each, either bigendian or littleendian, representing gray values. They may be arranged either top to bottom, left to right or bottom to top, left to right. There may be arbitrary header information at the start of the file (to which rawtopgm pays no attention at all other than the header's size). Arguments to rawtopgm tell how to interpret the pixels (a function that is served by a header in a regular graphics format). The width and height parameters tell the dimensions of the image. If you omit these parameters, rawtopgm assumes it is a quadratic image and bases the dimensions on the size of the input stream. If this size is not a perfect square, rawtopgm fails. When you don't specify width and height, rawtopgm reads the entire input stream into storage at once, which may take a lot of storage. Otherwise, rawtopgm ordinarily stores only one row at a time. If you don't specify imagefile, or specify -, the input is from Standard Input. The PGM output is to Standard Output. OPTIONS
-maxval N N is the maxval for the gray values in the input, and is also the maxval of the PGM output image. The default is the maximum value that can be represented in the number of bytes used for each sample (i.e. 255 or 65535). -bpp [1|2] tells the number of bytes that represent each sample in the input. If the value is 2, The most significant byte is first in the stream. The default is 1 byte per sample. -littleendian says that the bytes of each input sample are ordered with the least significant byte first. Without this option, rawtopgm assumes MSB first. This obviously has no effect when there is only one byte per sample. -headerskip N rawtopgm skips over N bytes at the beginning of the stream and reads the image immediately after. The default is 0. This is useful when the input is actually some graphics format that has a descriptive header followed by an ordinary raster, and you don't have a program that understands the header or you want to ignore the header. -rowskip N If there is padding at the ends of the rows, you can skip it with this option. Note that rowskip need not be an integer. Amaz- ingly, I once had an image with 0.376 bytes of padding per row. This turned out to be due to a file-transfer problem, but I was still able to read the image. Skipping a fractional byte per row means skipping one byte per multiple rows. -bt -bottomfirst By default, rawtopgm assumes the pixels in the input go top to bottom, left to right. If you specify -bt or -bottomfirst, rawtopgm assumes the pixels go bottom to top, left to right. The Molecular Dynamics and Leica confocal format, for example, use the latter arrangement. If you don't specify -bt when you should or vice versa, the resulting image is upside down, which you can correct with pnmflip . This option causes rawtopgm to read the entire input stream into storage at once, which may take a lot of storage. Ordinarly, raw- topgm stores only one row at a time. For backwards compatibility, rawtopgm also accepts -tb and -topbottom to mean exactly the same thing. The reasons these are named backwards is that the original author thought of it as specifying that the wrong results of assuming the data is top to bottom should be corrected by flipping the result top for bottom. Today, we think of it as simply specifying the format of the input data so that there are no wrong results. SEE ALSO
pgm(5), rawtoppm(1), pnmflip(1) AUTHORS
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer. Modified June 1993 by Oliver Trepte, oliver@fysik4.kth.se 14 September 2000 rawtopgm(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:16 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy