wish I would have looked around a little more before posting. This is what helped me out:
At this point though, I need to reorder the numbers inside the file in descending order. I know how to do it in ascending order with
How do I reverse it? Or just sort the opposite way to begin with?
How do I trim the leading zeroes, and (+,-) in the currency field ?
I have a text file.
Your bill of +00002780.96 for a/c no. 25287324 is due on 11-06.
Your bill of +00422270.48 for a/c no. 28931373 is due on 11-06.
I want the O/P file to be like.
Your bill of 2780.96 for a/c no. 25287324... (22 Replies)
Helo ,
I m writing small module of c.on RHEL 4
I have one buffer (for e.g. buffer = "002"
now I want to check whethere buffer contains leading zeroes and if it contains
leading zeroes then I want to remove all leading zeroes
( i.e. if buffer = "002" then I want to make buffer = "2")
how... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need add leading zeroes to a field in a file based on the character count. The field can be of 1 character to 6 character length. I need to make the field 14bytes.
eg:
8351,20,1
8351,234,6
8351,2,0
8351,1234,2
8351,123456,1
8351,12345,2
This should become.
... (3 Replies)
I have th following file
0000000011
0000000001
0000000231
0000000001
0000000022
noow when i run the following command
sed 's/^0+//g' file name
I receive the same output and the leading zeroes are not removed from the file . Please let me know how to achieve... (4 Replies)
Hi Forum.
I tried searching the forum but couldn't find a solution for my question.
I have the following data and would like to have a sed syntax to remove the leading zeroes from the 2nd field only:
Before:
2010-01-01|123|1|1000|2000|500|1500|600|700... (18 Replies)
Hello Gurus,
Quick question. I have a file with the following records:
A~000000000000518000~SLP ~99991231~20090701~88.50~USD~CS~
A~000000000000518000~SLP ~99991231~20090701~102.00~USD~CS~
A~000000000000772000~SLP ~99991231~20100701~118.08~USD~CS~
I wold like to do the following:
1. Add... (1 Reply)
I have the following script that renames filenames like:
blah_bleh_91_2011-09-26_00.05.43AM.xls
and transforms it in:
91_20110926_000543_3_blih.xls
for a in *.xls;
do
b="$(echo "${a}" | cut -d '_' -f4)"
dia=`echo ${b} | cut -c9-10`
mes=`echo ${b} | cut -c6-7`
anio=`echo ${b} | cut -c1-4`... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have some hundreds/thousands of files named logX.dat, where X can be any integer, and they are sequential, X ranges between 1 and any number:
log1.dat log2.dat log3.dat log6.dat log10.dat ... log6000.dat
I would like to rename them to
scatter_params_0001.dat... (6 Replies)
Hi,
i have a variable which conatins values like 00001,0003,00067,00459.
I want to use the values one by one and in the same form as they are like 00001,0003,00067,00459.
Also can anyone tell me how to increment those numbers by 1,keeping the format as same like 00002,0004,00068,00460.... (5 Replies)
Hello I have two vars loaded with
$VAR1="ISOMETHING103"
$VAR2="COTHERTHING04"
I need to:
1) Strip the first char. Could be sed 's/^.//'
2) The number has it's rules. If it has "hundreds", it needs to be striped.
If it is just two digits it shouldn't.
So, for VAR1 output should be... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: tristezo2k
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
kill
KILL(1) General Commands Manual KILL(1)NAME
kill - terminate a process with extreme prejudice
SYNOPSIS
kill [ -sig ] processid ...
kill -l
DESCRIPTION
Kill sends the TERM (terminate, 15) signal to the specified processes. If a signal name or number preceded by `-' is given as first argu-
ment, that signal is sent instead of terminate (see sigvec(2)). The signal names are listed by `kill -l', and are as given in
/usr/include/signal.h, stripped of the common SIG prefix.
The terminate signal will kill processes that do not catch the signal; `kill -9 ...' is a sure kill, as the KILL (9) signal cannot be
caught. By convention, if process number 0 is specified, all members in the process group (i.e. processes resulting from the current
login) are signaled (but beware: this works only if you use sh(1); not if you use csh(1).) Negative process numbers also have special
meanings; see kill(2) for details.
The killed processes must belong to the current user unless he is the super-user.
The process number of an asynchronous process started with `&' is reported by the shell. Process numbers can also be found by using ps(1).
Kill is a built-in to csh(1); it allows job specifiers of the form ``%...'' as arguments so process id's are not as often used as kill
arguments. See csh(1) for details.
SEE ALSO csh(1), ps(1), kill(2), sigvec(2)BUGS
A replacement for ``kill 0'' for csh(1) users should be provided.
4th Berkeley Distribution April 20, 1986 KILL(1)