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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Pattern Matching Count Urgent Post 302220426 by krabu on Thursday 31st of July 2008 05:03:02 PM
Old 07-31-2008
Another Problem

Quote:
Originally Posted by joeyg
Can you include a sample of the datafile? Perhaps first ten lines or so?

Since you say csv, then you can cut by field rather than character positions - thereby addressing your concern about field length.
i have written the script in cshell but there is another problem that when define variables in a file then run the file error ocurrs something like
missing )
e:g >>cat abc
set a =0;
set xyz =(1 2 3 4 5 6);
>> chmod 777 abc;
>>abc
missing parameter )
how can i correct this. I will much appreciate your help.
 

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UNIQ(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   UNIQ(1)

NAME
uniq - report repeated lines in a file SYNOPSIS
uniq [ -udc [ +n ] [ -n ] ] [ input [ output ] ] DESCRIPTION
Uniq reads the input file comparing adjacent lines. In the normal case, the second and succeeding copies of repeated lines are removed; the remainder is written on the output file. Note that repeated lines must be adjacent in order to be found; see sort(1). If the -u flag is used, just the lines that are not repeated in the original file are output. The -d option specifies that one copy of just the repeated lines is to be written. The normal mode output is the union of the -u and -d mode outputs. The -c option supersedes -u and -d and generates an output report in default style but with each line preceded by a count of the number of times it occurred. The n arguments specify skipping an initial portion of each line in the comparison: -n The first n fields together with any blanks before each are ignored. A field is defined as a string of non-space, non-tab charac- ters separated by tabs and spaces from its neighbors. +n The first n characters are ignored. Fields are skipped before characters. SEE ALSO
sort(1), comm(1) UNIQ(1)
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