I dont understand how this would work. It looks to me like list would be the file name of my list file, and name would just read in each record in the file (??? I dont know if that is the right interpretation). Then, the grep command looks for lines in the data file that start with the subject numbers in the list file. However, If I print to >> $name.out, then I am going to have a new file for every subject... which would not be good. I want to group by experimental condition.
If I am interpreting this correctly, I would be able to to this and just define the output files name to explicly be the ec number, if I read from my individual lists that are already grouped by condition.
Is there a way to read in column $1 from the list file (which is the ec) and have that govern the name of the .out, and then read the second column of the list file (the subject number) into the grep search pattern pattern?
So the grep line would be something like this, i think:
I just dont know how to read in the master list file so that it would work.
I don't want to be too specific in case you are just doing homework, but you had spaces in your example, and it sounded like you wanted files such as 1.out, 2.out.
I am a FORTRAN guy and not a UNIX expert by any means so sorry if this sounds dumb, but all I want to do is have a UNIX script which reads data from a file (say 1000 lines worth, each row is a file name) and store it in an array to perform an operation on later. As maddeningly simple as this... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a data file formatted like this:
Ex:
Mike 3434
Jack 481
Peter 12
Alan 926
I want to get this data into 2 variables: "Names" and "Numbers" that I can using one "for" loop to get the value as Names and Numbers
Like this:
for i in 0 1 2 3
do
echo $Names
echo... (12 Replies)
This is shell programming assignment.
It needs to create a file called .std_dbrc contains
STD_DBROOT=${HOME}/class/2031/Assgn3/STD_DB
(which includes all my simple database files)
and I am gonna use this .std_dbrc in my script file (read the data from the database files)
like this: .... (3 Replies)
I have 3 columns in an excel sheet.
c1 c2 c3
EIP_ACCOUNT SMALL_TS_01 select A.* from acc;
All the above 3 col shoud be passed a variable in the unix code.
1.How to read an excel file
2.How to pass these data as variable to the unic script (1 Reply)
Hi Frnds...
I have an input file name.txt and another file named as source.. name.txt is having only one column and source is having around 25 columns...i need to read from name.txt line by line and search it in source file and then save the result in results file..
I have a rough idea about the... (15 Replies)
In the hello.htm have the sentenses:
Hello $name
How are you?
The perl script:
$name = "David";
open(HEADER,"hello.htm");
while(<HEADER>) { $html .= $_; }
close(HEADER);
print "$html";I making something about template. But it can't process the $name variable. (4 Replies)
I need to read a text file that contain columns of data, i need to read 1st column as a function to call, and others are the data i need to get into a ksh script.
I am quite new to ksh scripting, i am not very sure how to read each row line by line and the data in each columns of that line, set... (3 Replies)
I have input data looks like this which is a part of a csv file
7,1265,76548,"0102:04"
8,1266,76545,"0112:04"
I need to make the output data should look like this and the output data will be part of text file:
7|1265000 |7654899 |A|
8|12660000 |76545999 |B|
The logic behind the... (6 Replies)
Hi Team,
in /tmp folder i have thousands of log files i want to read each file and grep a value called "Calling This".
Each logfile name is different but it ends with .log.
How can i achieve this?
Please excuse if i did any mistake by not following forum standards. I will surely follow... (10 Replies)
We have the data looks like below in a log file.
I want to generat files based on the string between two hash(#) symbol like below
Source:
#ext1#test1.tale2 drop
#ext1#test11.tale21 drop
#ext1#test123.tale21 drop
#ext2#test1.tale21 drop
#ext2#test12.tale21 drop
#ext3#test11.tale21 drop... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sanjeev G
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT XFREE86
script
SCRIPT(1) User Commands SCRIPT(1)NAME
script - make typescript of terminal session
SYNOPSIS
script [options] [file]
DESCRIPTION
script makes a typescript of everything displayed on your terminal. It is useful for students who need a hardcopy record of an interactive
session as proof of an assignment, as the typescript file can be printed out later with lpr(1).
If the argument file is given, script saves the dialogue in this file. If no filename is given, the dialogue is saved in the file type-
script.
OPTIONS -a, --append
Append the output to file or to typescript, retaining the prior contents.
-c, --command command
Run the command rather than an interactive shell. This makes it easy for a script to capture the output of a program that behaves
differently when its stdout is not a tty.
-e, --return
Return the exit code of the child process. Uses the same format as bash termination on signal termination exit code is 128+n.
-f, --flush
Flush output after each write. This is nice for telecooperation: one person does `mkfifo foo; script -f foo', and another can
supervise real-time what is being done using `cat foo'.
--force
Allow the default output destination, i.e. the typescript file, to be a hard or symbolic link. The command will follow a symbolic
link.
-q, --quiet
Be quiet (do not write start and done messages to standard output).
-t[file], --timing[=file]
Output timing data to standard error, or to file when given. This data contains two fields, separated by a space. The first field
indicates how much time elapsed since the previous output. The second field indicates how many characters were output this time.
This information can be used to replay typescripts with realistic typing and output delays.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
-h, --help
Display help text and exit.
NOTES
The script ends when the forked shell exits (a control-D for the Bourne shell (sh(1)), and exit, logout or control-d (if ignoreeof is not
set) for the C-shell, csh(1)).
Certain interactive commands, such as vi(1), create garbage in the typescript file. script works best with commands that do not manipulate
the screen, the results are meant to emulate a hardcopy terminal.
It is not recommended to run script in non-interactive shells. The inner shell of script is always interactive, and this could lead to
unexpected results. If you use script in the shell initialization file, you have to avoid entering an infinite loop. You can use for
example the .profile file, which is read by login shells only:
if test -t 0 ; then
script
exit
fi
You should also avoid use of script in command pipes, as script can read more input than you would expect.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variable is utilized by script:
SHELL If the variable SHELL exists, the shell forked by script will be that shell. If SHELL is not set, the Bourne shell is assumed.
(Most shells set this variable automatically).
SEE ALSO csh(1) (for the history mechanism), scriptreplay(1)HISTORY
The script command appeared in 3.0BSD.
BUGS
script places everything in the log file, including linefeeds and backspaces. This is not what the naive user expects.
script is primarily designed for interactive terminal sessions. When stdin is not a terminal (for example: echo foo | script), then the
session can hang, because the interactive shell within the script session misses EOF and script has no clue when to close the session. See
the NOTES section for more information.
AVAILABILITY
The script command is part of the util-linux package and is available from Linux Kernel Archive <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils
/util-linux/>.
util-linux June 2014 SCRIPT(1)