I want to grep "xxx(tab)iii" but dunno the way to do it.
I've tried : grep "xxx\tiii" * , but it dont works.
Is there anyone that can help me? :) (3 Replies)
I want to exclude (-v) blank records from a file before analysing it.
I know I can use '^]$' for spaces and tabs but how do you look for lines that have nothing (/n or line feed) ? (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm using the following to insert lines into file:
sed ${rowNr}i'\
first row\
second row\
third row\
' file.txt
How can I add tab in front of each added line? "\t" or actual TAB does not seem to work?
Thanks! (2 Replies)
I'm using OpenBSD 4.3 & ksh (pdksh) default shell.
I'm trying to use sed to insert a tab into a text file with no luck.
$ sed 's/SusanAppleton/Susan\o011Appleton/' myFile.txt
Susano011Appleton
$ sed 's/SusanAppleton/Susan\tAppleton/' myFile.txt
SusantAppletonI'm close to suicide here. Please... (9 Replies)
Hello All,
I have this file with the below contents
1|2|3|4|
this|that|which|what|
when I use, sed 's/|/\t/g' infile
I get,
1t2t3t4t
thistthattwhichtwhatt
Why is this?? :confused: :wall: (13 Replies)
Hello, I am trying to find a solution to problem that's proving to be beyond my newbie skills. The below files comes from a genetics study. File 1 describes a position on the genome and file 2 does the same but is formatted differently and has more information. I am trying to match all lines in... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: andmal
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
cat
cat(1) General Commands Manual cat(1)Name
cat - concatenate and print data
Syntax
cat [ -b ] [ -e ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -u ] [ -v ] file...
Description
The command reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Therefore, to display the file on the standard output you
type:
cat file
To concatenate two files and place the result on the third you type:
cat file1 file2 > file3
To concatenate two files and append them to a third you type:
cat file1 file2 >> file3
If no input file is given, or if a minus sign (-) is encountered as an argument, reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in
1024-byte blocks unless the standard output is a terminal, in which case it is line buffered. The utility supports the processing of 8-bit
characters.
Options-b Ignores blank lines and precedes each output line with its line number.
-e Displays a dollar sign ($) at the end of each output line.
-n Precedes all output lines (including blank lines) with line numbers.
-s Squeezes adjacent blank lines from output and single spaces output.
-t Displays non-printing characters (including tabs) in output. In addition to those representations used with the -v option, all tab
characters are displayed as ^I.
-u Unbuffers output.
-v Displays non-printing characters (excluding tabs and newline) as the ^x. If the character is in the range octal 0177 to octal 0241,
it is displayed as M-x. The delete character (octal 0177) displays as ^?. For example, is displayed as ^X.
See Alsocp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)cat(1)