Like mentioned above, you will need to expand tabs. A tab character is a single character but uses the width of up to 8 characters. You can calculate the actual width of each tab yourself, but it's probably easier if you pipe the file through expand
write a shell script that accepts a file name starting and ending line numbers as arguments and displays all the lines between the given line numbers:b:.help is appreciated.thank you. (3 Replies)
I know this should be simple, but I've been manning sed awk grep and find and am stupidly stumped :(
I'm trying to use sed (or awk, find, etc) to find 4 characters on the second line of a file.txt 44-47 characters in. I can find lots of sed things for lines, but not characters. (4 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to know how to solve one of my problems using expert unix commands.
I have a file with occasional blank lines;
for example;
dertu
frthu
fghtu
frtty
frtgy
frgtui
frgtu
ghrye
frhutp
frjuf
I need to edit the file so that the file looks like this; (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file will 1000 lines.... I want to deleted some line in the file... like 800-850 lines i want to remove in that...
can somebody help me..?
thanks. (2 Replies)
hello everyone
my file contains many records, the following is a sample:
BEGIN
ASX1500000050002010120000000308450201012000177
ASX1100002000000201012000000038450201012000220
ASX1600100005000201012000000038450020101200177
ASX1900100006000201067000000058450020101200177... (2 Replies)
I'm trying to grep lines where the digits at the end of each line are greater than digits. Tried this but it will only allow me to specify 2 digits. Any ideas would greatly be appreciated. grep -i '\<\{3,4,5\}\>' file
---------- Post updated at 05:58 PM ---------- Previous update was at 05:41... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
This might be a basic question... I need to write a script to find all/any Speacial/Null/Control Chars and Print Line Numbers from an input file.
Output something like
Null Characters in File Name at : Line Numbers
Line = Print the line
Control Characters in File Name at : Line... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
i want to write a shell script read below file line by line and want to exclude the lines which contains empty value for MOUNTPOINT field.
i am using centos 7 Operating system.
want to read below file.
# cat /tmp/d5
NAME="/dev/sda" TYPE="disk" SIZE="60G" OWNER="root"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: balu1234
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
uniq
UNIQ(1) BSD General Commands Manual UNIQ(1)NAME
uniq -- report or filter out repeated lines in a file
SYNOPSIS
uniq [-c | -d | -u] [-i] [-f num] [-s chars] [input_file [output_file]]
DESCRIPTION
The uniq utility reads the specified input_file comparing adjacent lines, and writes a copy of each unique input line to the output_file. If
input_file is a single dash ('-') or absent, the standard input is read. If output_file is absent, standard output is used for output. The
second and succeeding copies of identical adjacent input lines are not written. Repeated lines in the input will not be detected if they are
not adjacent, so it may be necessary to sort the files first.
The following options are available:
-c Precede each output line with the count of the number of times the line occurred in the input, followed by a single space.
-d Only output lines that are repeated in the input.
-f num Ignore the first num fields in each input line when doing comparisons. A field is a string of non-blank characters separated from
adjacent fields by blanks. Field numbers are one based, i.e., the first field is field one.
-s chars
Ignore the first chars characters in each input line when doing comparisons. If specified in conjunction with the -f option, the
first chars characters after the first num fields will be ignored. Character numbers are one based, i.e., the first character is
character one.
-u Only output lines that are not repeated in the input.
-i Case insensitive comparison of lines.
ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of uniq as described in environ(7).
EXIT STATUS
The uniq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
COMPATIBILITY
The historic +number and -number options have been deprecated but are still supported in this implementation.
SEE ALSO sort(1)STANDARDS
The uniq utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'') as amended by Cor. 1-2002.
HISTORY
A uniq command appeared in Version 3 AT&T UNIX.
BSD December 17, 2009 BSD