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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Exclude lines which have blanks at certain positions Post 302248597 by helper on Saturday 18th of October 2008 04:11:58 PM
Old 10-18-2008
CPU & Memory Exclude lines which have blanks at certain positions

Hi All,

I am getting a input file which doesnt have a field seperator. The file is being sorted on certain positions say from 0.55 to 0.59. If there are any blanks from 0.55 to 0.59 they will be listed as first set of records. I am not sure abt the number of records which will have blanks at those positions (0.55 - 0.59), but have to exclude all those lines which have blanks from 0.55 to 0.59.

eg : sort -y -T /temp/usespace +0.55 -0.59 <input filename> >> <output filename>

Is there any one line command to this ??? If not then how to go abt this ???

Please let me know regarding the same.
 

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sortbib(1)						      General Commands Manual							sortbib(1)

Name
       sortbib - sort bibliographic database

Syntax
       sortbib [-sKEYS] database...

Description
       The  command sorts files of records containing refer key-letters by user-specified keys.  Records may be separated by blank lines, or by .[
       and .] delimiters, but the two styles may not be mixed together.  This program reads through each database and pulls out key fields,  which
       are  sorted  separately.   The sorted key fields contain the file pointer, byte offset, and length of corresponding records.  These records
       are delivered using disk seeks and reads, so may not be used in a pipeline to read standard input.

       By default, alphabetizes by the first %A and the %D fields, which contain the senior author and date.  The -s option is used to specify new
       KEYS.  For instance, -sATD will sort by author, title, and date, while -sA+D will sort by all authors, and date.  Sort keys past the fourth
       are not meaningful.  No more than 16 databases may be sorted together at one time.  Records longer than 4096 characters will be truncated.

       The command sorts on the last word on the %A line, which is assumed to be the author's last name.  A word in the final  position,  such	as
       ``jr.''	or  ``ed.'',  will be ignored if the name beforehand ends with a comma.  Authors with two-word last names or unusual constructions
       can be sorted correctly by using the convention ``'' in place of a blank.  A %Q field is considered to be the same as %A, except  sorting
       begins  with  the first, not the last, word.  The command sorts on the last word of the %D line, usually the year.  It also ignores leading
       articles (like ``A'' or ``The'') when sorting by titles in the %T or %J fields; it will ignore articles of any  modern  European  language.
       If a sort-significant field is absent from a record, places that record before other records containing that field.

Options
       -sKEYS
	  Specifies new sort KEYS.  For example, ATD sorts by author, title, and date.

See Also
       addbib(1), indxbib(1), lookbib(1), refer(1), roffbib(1)

																	sortbib(1)
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