Please provide an example of the file. You could use awk to separate the month, day and year
That will print the second field separated by '-'. If you wish to print the other fields just use $1 or $3 instead. To print more than one field, "print $2,$3".
Can anyone give me a hand with some questions by e-mailing me directly, so I can relay the questions inorder. I really would appreciate anyone that can help.
Thank You in advance, I am online and will reply instantly.
Charley
<email removed> (5 Replies)
Using the last, uniq, sort and cut commands, determine how many times the different users have logged in.
I know how to use the last command and cut command...
i came up with last | cut -f1 -d" " | uniq
i dont know if this is right, can someone please help me... thanks (1 Reply)
how to cut for pattern in the file and then count each occurance?
say, each line has unique pattern and u want to grep but at last, you want to see how many of them occur?
say,
cut -d'\" -f15 filename | sort -? or.. do i need to use sed or something..
i need to count lets say
how... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a small problem, hope you can help me out here.
I have a file that contains the same format of lines in 99% of the cases.
906516 XYZ.NNN V 0000 20070711164648 userID1 userID2 hostname 20070711164641
There are unfortunately several lines with these... (5 Replies)
I have the following requirement.
1. I have to concatenate the 10 fixed width files.
2. sort based on first 10 characters
3. after that i have remove first 10 chacters from the file.
can you please tell me how to do it.
Thanks in Advance
Samba (1 Reply)
<B>andan100:Anders:Andersson:800101-1234:TNCCC_1:TDDB46 TDDB80:berbe101:Bertil:Bertilsson:800102-1234:TNCCC_1:TDDB46 TDDB80:The top is how it looks right now I want it t look
like this under and I want it to be sorted. I have tried with cut -f -d studenter.txt and so on but it still doesnt work... (2 Replies)
Please help.
I have a file containing rows of information. The row needs to be broken down into blocks of 5 and then sorted.
Example:
10381
1042010046 ... (4 Replies)
While looping through a file, I am cutting different length of characters (based on their length) like columns and want to produce the output in a separate file with different columns being separated by a comma.
How to achieve this with an online command. I don't want to create multiple variables... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have identified how to use command chaining as per below on a file, to capture the header of a file, as well as the line containing the C: drive.
$ cat test.txt
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
rootfs 237G 153G 84G 65% /
none 237G 153G 84G ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sand1234
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
time::ctime
Time::CTime(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Time::CTime(3)NAME
Time::CTime -- format times ala POSIX asctime
SYNOPSIS
use Time::CTime
print ctime(time);
print asctime(localtime(time));
print strftime(template, localtime(time));
strftime conversions
%% PERCENT
%a day of the week abbr
%A day of the week
%b month abbr
%B month
%c ctime format: Sat Nov 19 21:05:57 1994
%d DD
%D MM/DD/YY
%e numeric day of the month
%f floating point seconds (milliseconds): .314
%F floating point seconds (microseconds): .314159
%h month abbr
%H hour, 24 hour clock, leading 0's)
%I hour, 12 hour clock, leading 0's)
%j day of the year
%k hour
%l hour, 12 hour clock
%m month number, starting with 1
%M minute, leading 0's
%n NEWLINE
%o ornate day of month -- "1st", "2nd", "25th", etc.
%p AM or PM
%r time format: 09:05:57 PM
%R time format: 21:05
%S seconds, leading 0's
%t TAB
%T time format: 21:05:57
%U week number, Sunday as first day of week
%w day of the week, numerically, Sunday == 0
%W week number, Monday as first day of week
%x date format: 11/19/94
%X time format: 21:05:57
%y year (2 digits)
%Y year (4 digits)
%Z timezone in ascii. eg: PST
DESCRIPTION
This module provides routines to format dates. They correspond to the libc routines. &strftime() supports a pretty good set of coversions
-- more than most C libraries.
strftime supports a pretty good set of conversions.
The POSIX module has very similar functionality. You should consider using it instead if you do not have allergic reactions to system
libraries.
GENESIS
Written by David Muir Sharnoff <muir@idiom.com>.
The starting point for this package was a posting by Paul Foley <paul@ascent.com>
LICENSE
Copyright (C) 1996-1999 David Muir Sharnoff. License hereby granted for anyone to use, modify or redistribute this module at their own
risk. Please feed useful changes back to muir@idiom.com.
perl v5.12.1 2004-02-08 Time::CTime(3)