While concatenating 2 values, one which expanded to fixed width & other not, I am not getting value expanded as fixed width.
Following is script for the same :
#!/bin/sh
var1="abc"
var2="def"
var1Fxd=`echo $var1 | awk '{printf("%-6s",$0)}'`
echo $var1Fxd""$var2
But, if I try -
echo... (2 Replies)
How do I trim the leading zeroes, and (+,-) in the currency field ?
I have a text file.
Your bill of +00002780.96 for a/c no. 25287324 is due on 11-06.
Your bill of +00422270.48 for a/c no. 28931373 is due on 11-06.
I want the O/P file to be like.
Your bill of 2780.96 for a/c no. 25287324... (22 Replies)
Hello,
Could someone please help me to convert a string(s) of comma separated values into space padded columns in .ksh?
ex.
10-21-2008,someword,blah,127.0.0.1,8,3
10-21-2008,randomword,ick,128.0.111.128,1,0
converted to
10-21-2008 someword blah 127.0.0.1 8... (6 Replies)
Hi all. Im trying to use a sequence in a while loop like this below. I need it for navigating a year, month, day folder structure where a user can input the start date and have it go to the desired end date. The script will grab a certain file on each day then move onto the next. Ive got all that... (3 Replies)
I’m looking for an elegant way to convert a delimited file (comma delimited in this case) to padded columns (for printing in non-proportional font) but the length of each column is not known ahead of time. It needs to be calculated for each column from the longest entry in that column in a given... (3 Replies)
There are two columns on the data base table, create and update timestamps of datatype timestamp.
I dont have these fields on the csv file. So I am doing the below.
awk -F , -v d="$(date "+ %Y-%m-%d-%H.%M.%S")" '{ OFS=FS; print $1, $2, $3, $4, d, $5, $6, d }' temp.csv > temp1.csv
and then... (3 Replies)
Hello, here is the outout of the command below.. Can someone please tell me how to get the output as below
output needed:
18914,30716,17051,4139,14155...
( no comma for the last value)
ps -e -o pcpu,pid,user,tty,args | sort -n -k 1 -r | head | awk '{print $2}'
18914
30716
17051
4139... (10 Replies)
Is possible to print padded string in printf?
Example
echo 1 | awk '{printf("%03d\n", $1)}'
001I want
S1
S11
S2
S21to be padded as:
S01
S11
S02
S21Thanks! (26 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
26 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
trim
textutil::trim(n) Text and string utilities, macro processing textutil::trim(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
textutil::trim - Procedures to trim strings
SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.2
package require textutil::trim ?0.7?
::textutil::trim::trim string ?regexp?
::textutil::trim::trimleft string ?regexp?
::textutil::trim::trimright string ?regexp?
::textutil::trim::trimPrefix string prefix
::textutil::trim::trimEmptyHeading string
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
The package textutil::trim provides commands that trim strings using arbitrary regular expressions.
The complete set of procedures is described below.
::textutil::trim::trim string ?regexp?
Remove in string any leading and trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new
string. This is done for all lines in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the
string and a newline, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning
and the end of the string. The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \t]+".
::textutil::trim::trimleft string ?regexp?
Remove in string any leading substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new string. This apply
on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or
between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the string.
The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \t]+".
::textutil::trim::trimright string ?regexp?
Remove in string any trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and return the result as a new string. This apply
on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or
between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the string.
The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \t]+".
::textutil::trim::trimPrefix string prefix
Removes the prefix from the beginning of string and returns the result. The string is left unchanged if it doesn't have prefix at
its beginning.
::textutil::trim::trimEmptyHeading string
Looks for empty lines (including lines consisting of only whitespace) at the beginning of the string and removes it. The modified
string is returned as the result of the command.
BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems. Please report such in the category textutil
of the Tcllib SF Trackers [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883]. Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for
either package and/or documentation.
SEE ALSO
regexp(n), split(n), string(n)
KEYWORDS
prefix, regular expression, string, trimming
CATEGORY
Text processing
textutil 0.7 textutil::trim(n)