im using this command to return the number of links in my directory,
grep -c -i -h "href" *html */*html *htm *shtml
is there a way of adding these to get the total?
Cheers (3 Replies)
:confused:
I have plain text file "tmp" which include a range of numbers(bytes), say like:
123
234
567
2434
2323
213123
How can I add them and display out.
should I use AWK, then how?
I am a newer in Bourne shell, please give me a hand, thanks a lot (7 Replies)
I've refined the filesystem size using awk and directed to a file name.
eg, here's the content in a file called "numbers"
$cat numbers
345
543
23423456
44435
546
.
.
how do you write a script to all these numbers to get the total?
thanks a lot. (9 Replies)
Hello..
I have got one file ...
I want to add line numbers with space form starting to ending..
for example...if the file is
--------------------------
sand sorcd 2345 345
recds 234 234 5687
yeres 568 988 erfg4 67
--------------------------
I need the output
... (4 Replies)
I need to add a list of numbers contained in a file. For example, the file would look like this:
10
290
342
5409
I need to get a total sum of all the numbers in the list. Any ideas?
Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hello.
I new to Shell Scripting.
I have a file and here is the output of the file.
1.1M
1.1M
3.3M
149K
61K
75K
144K
135K
82K
170K
327K
2.0M
219K
165K (8 Replies)
Hi All thanks a lot for your previous replies. I need some help here. I am writing a script to test a machine for a thereshold. It is genrating the list of number that have to be added but not displaying the added value.
The script is like this
#!/bin/sh... (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
Is there an easy way I can add up the numbers in column $4 when the day of the week in column $1 is equal? So in the end I want an aggregate total for each day. e.g. 01,12,2009 00000000032000
01,12,2009,0000000000002094
02,12,2009,0000000000002128
03,12,2009,0000000000002117... (3 Replies)
echo "0.1 2.0 0.4 2.0 4.3 1.0 6.0 9.0" | awk 'BEGIN {total=0} {total += $1} END {print total}'
I want to add the above output from the echo command, but i can't figure this out. The output above always spits out inaccurate numbers.
can someone please provide me with a one liner similar to... (4 Replies)
Hello,
How to add numbers that are read from a file /tmp/test
The content of the file look like
1234
234
432
1235
123
I read the file content in a for loop
f=/tmp/test
for i in `cat $f`
do
.
.
done
Santhosh (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: mvsanthosh
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
numbound
NUMBOUND(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation NUMBOUND(1)NAME
numbound - Find boundary numbers in files or STDIN.
SYNOPSIS
numbound [-dhlV] <FILE>
| numbound [-dhlV] (Input on STDIN from pipeline.)
numbound [-dhlV] (Input on STDIN. Use Ctrl-D to stop.)
DESCRIPTION
numbound will find boundary numbers (minimum and maximum) in files or STDIN. By default it will find the upper bound in the set of numbers
(the maximum number) in the files or on STDIN. You can use the -l option for finding the lower bound (minumum number).
OPTIONS -l-- Return the lower bound number in the set (the minimum number)
-h Help: You're looking at it.
-V Increase verbosity.
-d Debug mode. For developers
BUGS
numbound currently will only gather the first number on each line instead of all the numbers on the lines.
SEE ALSO numaverage(1), numinterval(1), numnormalize(1), numgrep(1), numprocess(1), numsum(1), numrandom(1), numrange(1), numround(1)COPYRIGHT
numbound is part of the num-utils package, which is copyrighted by Suso Banderas and released under the GPL license. Please read the
COPYING and LICENSE files that came with the num-utils package
Developers can read the GOALS file and contact me about providing
submitions or help for the project.
MORE INFO
More info on numbound can be found at:
http://suso.suso.org/programs/num-utils/
perl v5.10.1 2009-10-31 NUMBOUND(1)