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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users extraction of data from a text file which follows certain pattern Post 302238984 by mohkris on Monday 22nd of September 2008 02:26:16 PM
Old 09-22-2008
cat file2 | sed "s/now running/~$2/g" | tr "\n" " " | tr "~" "\n" | cut -d" " -f2,6

Thank you so much for your response and the solution..

It worked fine..

But i forgot to specify in my question that the names may contain two or three words separated by spaces between them..

Like

now running Speak225 freemin

sep 22 mon 16:34:05 2008

--------------------------------
--------------------------------

now running BBp499 freesms local

sep 22 mon 16:36:15 2008
------------------------------
----------------------------


If you dont mind, Please help me in getting those names i.e "Speak225 freemin" , "BBp499 freesms local" and their respective timings...

That means i need to get all the words in the line after "now running" till the end of that line and the timings from the next line

please...

thank you once again for your response..

If possible please tell me what is "-f2"..

Last edited by mohkris; 09-22-2008 at 10:48 PM..
 

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STRSPLIT(3pub)						       C Programmer's Manual						    STRSPLIT(3pub)

NAME
strsplit - split string into words SYNOPSIS
#include <publib.h> int strsplit(char *src, char **words, int maxw, const char *sep); DESCRIPTION
strsplit splits the src string into words separated by one or more of the characters in sep (or by whitespace characters, as specified by isspace(3), if sep is the empty string). Pointers to the words are stored in successive elements in the array pointed to by words. No more than maxw pointers are stored. The input string is modifed by replacing the separator character following a word with ''. However, if there are more than maxw words, only maxw-1 words will be returned, and the maxwth pointer in the array will point to the rest of the string. If maxw is 0, no modification is done. This can be used for counting how many words there are, e.g., so that space for the word pointer table can be allocated dynamically. strsplit splits the src string into words separated by one or more of the characters in sep (or by whitespace characters, as defined by isspace(3), if sep is the empty string). The src string is modified by replacing the separator character after each word with ''. A pointer to each word is stored into successive elements of the array words. If there are more than maxw words, a '' is stored after the first maxw-1 words only, and the words[maxw-1] will contain a pointer to the rest of the string after the word in words[maxw-2]. RETURN VALUE
strsplit returns the total number of words in the input string. EXAMPLE
Assuming that words are separated by white space, to count the number of words on a line, one might say the following. n = strsplit(line, NULL, 0, ""); To print out the fields of a colon-separated list (such as PATH, or a line from /etc/passwd or /etc/group), one might do the following. char *fields[15]; int i, n; n = strsplit(list, fields, 15, ":"); if (n > 15) n = 15; for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) printf("field %d: %s ", i, fields[i]); In real life, one would of course prefer to not restrict the number of fields, so one might either allocated the pointer table dynamically (first counting the number of words using something like the first example), or realize that since it is the original string that is being modified, one can do the following: char *fields[15]; int i, n; do { n = strsplit(list, fields, 15, ":"); if (n > 15) n = 15; for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) printf("field %d: %s ", i, fields[i]); list = field[n-1] + strlen(field[n-1]); } while (n == 15); SEE ALSO
publib(3), strtok(3) AUTHOR
The idea for this function came from C-News source code by Henry Spencer and Geoff Collyer. Their function is very similar, but this implementation is by Lars Wirzenius (lars.wirzenius@helsinki.fi) Publib C Programmer's Manual STRSPLIT(3pub)
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