Can anyone help me to count number of occurrence of the strings based on column value. Say i have 300 files with 1000 record length from which i need to count the number of occurrence string which is existing from 213 to 219. Some may be unique and some may be repeated. (8 Replies)
Need to search a pattern occurrence (count) in a specified file.
Below is the details
$ cat fruits
apple apple
ball ball
apple
ball ball ball
apple apple apple
cat cat
cat cat cat
apple
apple
Note: If I'll use the grep command with -c option then it'll count the 1st occurrence in... (6 Replies)
Hi
I have the following file
ENST001 ENST002 4 4 4 88 9 9
ENST004 3 3 3 99 8 8
ENST009 ENST010 ENST006 8 8 8 77 8 8
Basically I want to count how many times ENST* is repeated in each line so the expected results is
2
1
3
Any suggestion please ? (4 Replies)
if there's a file containing:
money king money queen money cat money also money king
all those strings are on one line in the file.
how can i find out how many times "money king" shows up in the line?
egrep -c "money king" wont work. (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file which contained a set of numbers like
Col1 col2 col3 col4
1 sa 13 0
2 sb 14 0
3 sc 15 9
4 sd 16 -9
5 sd 20 -2
6 sd 20 4
Here in last column I need to count the zeros, positive values and negative values,
please help me to do that. (2 Replies)
Hi All,
let's say an input looks like:
C1,C2,C3,C4,C5,C6,C7,C8,C9,C10,C11
----------------------------------
1|0123452|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0156123|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0178903|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0127896|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0981678|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I have an input file as below. I would like to count the occurrence of pattern matching 8th field for each line.
Input:
field_01 field_02 field_03 field_04 field_05 field_06 field_07 field_08
TA T TA T TA TA TA... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: huiyee1
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
strncasecmp
STRING(3) Library Functions Manual STRING(3)NAME
strcat, strncat, strcmp, strncmp, strcasecmp, strncasecmp, strcpy, strncpy, strlen, index, rindex - string operations
SYNOPSIS
#include <strings.h>
char *strcat(s, append)
char *s, *append;
char *strncat(s, append, count)
char *s, *append;
int count;
strcmp(s1, s2)
char *s1, *s2;
strncmp(s1, s2, count)
char *s1, *s2;
int count;
strcasecmp(s1, s2)
char *s1, *s2;
strncasecmp(s1, s2, count)
char *s1, *s2;
int count;
char *strcpy(to, from)
char *to, *from;
char *strncpy(to, from, count)
char *to, *from;
int count;
strlen(s)
char *s;
char *index(s, c)
char *s, c;
char *rindex(s, c)
char *s, c;
DESCRIPTION
These functions operate on null-terminated strings. They do not check for overflow of any receiving string.
Strcat appends a copy of string append to the end of string s. Strncat copies at most count characters. Both return a pointer to the null-
terminated result.
Strcmp compares its arguments and returns an integer greater than, equal to, or less than 0, according as s1 is lexicographically greater
than, equal to, or less than s2. Strncmp makes the same comparison but looks at at most count characters. Strcasecmp and strncasecmp are
identical in function, but are case insensitive. The returned lexicographic difference reflects a conversion to lower-case.
Strcpy copies string from to to, stopping after the null character has been moved. Strncpy copies exactly count characters, appending
nulls if from is less than count characters in length; the target may not be null-terminated if the length of from is count or more. Both
return to.
Strlen returns the number of non-null characters in s.
Index (rindex) returns a pointer to the first (last) occurrence of character c in string s or zero if c does not occur in the string. Set-
ting c to NULL works.
4th Berkeley Distribution October 22, 1987 STRING(3)