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)
Dear All
i want to compate two diff file line by line. Kindly help me.
file 1:
1;givi;01012000;wer
2;sss;02012000;rrr
3;ccc;03012000;ttt
file 2:
0;uuu;01012000;lll
1;givi;01012000;wer
2;sss;02012000;rrr
3;ccc;03012000;ttt
5;givi;01012000;hhh
Output1: comman line to both file... (3 Replies)
Hi all
I need help on comparing two texts files line by line and print the total number of lines matched. Any help is appreciated. Thanks in advance. (4 Replies)
Hi, Unix Gurus:
I have a requirement which need to compare the first line of two files.
e.g;
file1
123
abc
def
file2
123
abcdef
defe
I need compare first line: in two file: in this case, two file contain same value in first line (123)
anybody can help me.
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm trying to figure out which are the trusted-ips and which are not using a script file.. I have a file named 'ip-list.txt' which contains some ip addresses and another file named 'trusted-ip-list.txt' which also contains some ip addresses. I want to read a line from... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a issue, I need to loop through a comma delimited file and check for the length which exceeds specified length , if Yes truncate the string.
But my problem is , I do not have to check for all the fields and the field lenght is not same for all the fields.
For ex:
Say my line... (9 Replies)
Hi Experts,
Would really appreciate if anyone can guide me how to compare two pdf files line by line and report the difference to another file. (3 Replies)
I am new to awk scripting.
I want to do a field by word (field) comparison of two files File1.txt and File2.txt.
The files contain a list of | (pipe) separated field.
**File 1:
-------------------
aaa|bbb|ccc|eee|fff
lll|mmm|nnn|ooo|ppp
rrr|sss|ttt|uuu|vvv**
File 2: ... (7 Replies)
Hello All!
Thanks for taking time out and helping.
My issue is, I have two files that have file names in it. Now, i need to go through each line of both the files and when the file names are different, i need to rename the file. Below is the example:
File1</
fil1ename1.txt
filename2,txt... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: svks1985
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
elvfmt
ELVFMT(1) User commands ELVFMT(1)NAME
elvfmt - adjust line-length for paragraphs of text
SYNOPSIS
elvfmt [-w width | -width] [-s] [-c] [-i chars] [-C] [-M] [file]...
VERSION
This page describes the Elvis 2.2_0 version of elvfmt. See elvis(1).
DESCRIPTION
elvfmt is a simple text formatter. It inserts or deletes newlines, as necessary, to make all lines in a paragraph be approximately the
same width. It preserves indentation and word spacing.
If you don't name any files on the command line, then elvfmt will read from stdin.
It is typically used from within vi(1) or elvis(1) to adjust the line breaks in a single paragraph. To do this, move the cursor to the top
of the paragraph, type "!}elvfmt", and hit <Return>.
OPTIONS -w width or -width
Use a line width of width characters instead of the default of 72 characters.
-s Don't join lines shorter than the line width to fill paragraphs.
-c Try to be smarter about crown margins. Specifically, this tells elvfmt to expect the first line of each paragraph to have a differ-
ent indentation than subsequent lines. If text from the first input line is wrapped onto the second output line, then elvfmt will
scan ahead to figure out what indentation it should use for the second output line, instead of reusing the first line's indentation.
-i chars
Allow the indentation text to include any character from chars, in addition to spaces and tabs. You should quote the chars list to
protect it from the shell.
-C and -M
These are shortcuts for combinations of other flags. is short for and is useful for reformatting C/C++ comments. is short for
and is useful for reformatting email messages.
SEE ALSO vi(1), elvis(1)AUTHOR
Steve Kirkendall
kirkenda@cs.pdx.edu
ELVFMT(1)