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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare 2 files yet again but with a twist Post 302260626 by Autumn Tree on Friday 21st of November 2008 09:06:15 AM
Old 11-21-2008
Still doesn't work like this - I get no output?

[root@lab02 tmp]# /usr/xpg4/bin/awk 'NR==FNR{_[$1]=$2;next}$2=$2 FS _[$1]' gdl dkl
[root@lab02 tmp]#

files look like this:

gdl:
15. 392
19. 79
25. 14
28. 3
29. 2
3. 14
32. 11
41. 4
42. 8
43. 4
44. 1
45. 3
46. 1
47. 1
49. 4
50. 2
52. 2
53. 7

dkl:
0. c1t0d0
1. c2t0d0
2. c2t1d0
3. c2t2d0
4. c2t3d0
5. c2t4d0
6. c2t5d0
7. c2t8d0
8. c2t9d0
9. c2t10d0
10. c2t11d0
11. c2t12d0
12. c2t13d0
13. c3t0d0
14. c3t1d0
15. c3t2d0
16. c3t3d0
17. c3t5d0
18. c3t8d0
19. c3t9d0
20. c3t10d0
21. c3t11d0
22. c3t13d0
23. c6t0d0
24. c6t1d0
25. c6t2d0
26. c6t3d0
27. c6t4d0
28. c6t5d0
29. c6t6d0
30. c6t7d0
31. c6t8d0
32. c6t9d0
33. c6t10d0
34. c6t18d0
35. c6t19d0
36. c6t20d0
37. c6t21d0
38. c6t22d0
39. c6t23d0
40. c6t24d0
41. c6t25d0
42. c6t26d0
43. c7t0d0
44. c7t1d0
45. c7t2d0
46. c7t3d0
47. c7t4d0
48. c7t5d0
49. c7t6d0
50. c7t7d0
51. c7t8d0
52. c7t9d0
53. c7t10d0
55. c7t19d0
57. c7t21d0
58. c7t22d0
59. c7t23d0
60. c7t24d0
61. c7t25d0
62. c7t26d0
63. c11t0d0
64. c11t1d0
65. c11t2d0
66. c11t3d0
67. c11t4d0
68. c13t0d0
69. c13t1d0
70. c13t2d0
71. c13t3d0
72. c13t4d0
73. c13t5d0
74. c13t9d0
75. c13t10d0
76. c13t11d0
77. c13t12d0
78. c13t13d0

Last edited by Autumn Tree; 11-21-2008 at 10:20 AM..
 

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COMBINE(1)																COMBINE(1)

NAME
combine - combine sets of lines from two files using boolean operations SYNOPSIS
combine file1 and file2 combine file1 not file2 combine file1 or file2 combine file1 xor file2 _ file1 and file2 _ _ file1 not file2 _ _ file1 or file2 _ _ file1 xor file2 _ DESCRIPTION
combine combines the lines in two files. Depending on the boolean operation specified, the contents will be combined in different ways: and Outputs lines that are in file1 if they are also present in file2. not Outputs lines that are in file1 but not in file2. or Outputs lines that are in file1 or file2. xor Outputs lines that are in either file1 or file2, but not in both files. "-" can be specified for either file to read stdin for that file. The input files need not be sorted, and the lines are output in the order they occur in file1 (followed by the order they occur in file2 for the two "or" operations). Bear in mind that this means that the operations are not commutative; "a and b" will not necessarily be the same as "b and a". To obtain commutative behavior sort and uniq the result. Note that this program can be installed as "_" to allow for the syntactic sugar shown in the latter half of the synopsis (similar to the test/[ command). It is not currently installed as "_" by default, but you can alias it to that if you like. SEE ALSO
join(1) AUTHOR
Copyright 2006 by Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net> Licensed under the GNU GPL. moreutils 2012-04-09 COMBINE(1)
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