The order is somewhat random and may vary among the many implementations of awk.
This is an example how to to print the array in the order it's created. It uses a helper array b to hold the order of the main array (use nawk or /usr/xpg4/bin/awk on Solaris if you get errors):
With this example it's also possible to access a specific number of an element of the array, for instance, to print the 5th element:
And this example shows how you can sort an array with the external sort command if you don't have gawk:
Hi,
When using sort on an associative array:
foreach $key (sort(keys(%opalfabet))){
$value = $opalfabet{$key};
$result .= $value;
}
How does it handle double values?
It seems to me that it removes them, is that true? If so, is there a way to get... (2 Replies)
plz help me..........i have a ksh script that sorts data in ascending order.
the 1st half is correct,but for the line no 31 its showing problem
1 #!/bin/ksh
2
3
4
5 echo "Enter the array length"
6 read num
7
8
9 echo "enter the... (4 Replies)
How is it possible to sort different nummeric values within an Array. But i don`t want the highest or the lowest. I need the most frequently occurring value.
For examble:
My Array has to following values = (200 404 404 500 404 404 404 200 404)
The result should be 404
The values are... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have an array in perl as @match = (201001,201002,201001,201002);
I am trying to sort this array as
@match = sort(@match);
print "@match";
I dont see the output sorted any answers
I also tried another way, but still the results are not sorted
foreach my $match (sort { $a... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to do the following sorting, but the output is not what i expected. Why 222 and 2222 are not at the last two elements of array?
awk 'BEGIN{a="22";a="2222";a="33";a="44";a="222";a="11";a="22";a="33";asort(a); for (i=1;i<=8;i++) print a}'
11
22
22
222
2222
33
33
44... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i have a txtfile with the format <Nr>tab<word>tab<other stuff>new line and i want to sort the <word>-colum with a perl script.
My textfile:
<Nr>tab<word>tab<other stuff>new line
6807 die ART.Acc.Sg.Fem
6426 der ART.Gen.Sg.Fem
2 die ART.Nom.Sg.Fem
87 auf APPR.--
486 nicht PTKNEG.--... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a script which produces a nice table but I want to sort it on column 3.
This is the output line in the script:
# Output
{ FS = ":";
format = "%11s %6s %-16s\n";
prinft "\n"
printf ( format, "Size","Count","Who" ) }
for (i in... (21 Replies)
I need help to sort the output of an awk array
Example datadata="1 blue
2 green
3 blue
4 yellow
5 blue
6 red
7 yellow
8 red
9 yellow
10 yellow
11 green
12 orange
13 black"
My awk line to get output in one lineecho "$data" | awk ' {arr++; next} END { for (i in arr) { if(arr>1 )... (2 Replies)
Hi, guys
I just wanted to sort the elements of an array ascendingly.
I know the following code does work well:
array=(13 435 8 23 100)
for i in {0..4}
do
j=$((i+1))
while ]
do
if } -le ${array} ]]
then :
else
min=${array}
${array}=${array}
${array}=$min
fi... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: franksunnn
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
ucblinks
ucblinks(1B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands ucblinks(1B)NAME
ucblinks - adds /dev entries to give SunOS 4.x compatible names to SunOS 5.x devices
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/ucblinks [-e rulebase] [-r rootdir]
DESCRIPTION
ucblinks creates symbolic links under the /dev directory for devices whose SunOS 5.x names differ from their SunOS 4.x names. Where possi-
ble, these symbolic links point to the device's SunOS 5.x name rather than to the actual /devices entry.
ucblinks does not remove unneeded compatibility links; these must be removed by hand.
ucblinks should be called each time the system is reconfiguration-booted, after any new SunOS 5.x links that are needed have been created,
since the reconfiguration may have resulted in more compatibility names being needed.
In releases prior to SunOS 5.4, ucblinks used a nawk rule-base to construct the SunOS 4.x compatible names. ucblinks no longer uses nawk
for the default operation, although nawk rule-bases can still be specifed with the -e option. The nawk rule-base equivalent to the SunOS
5.4 default operation can be found in /usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk.
OPTIONS -e rulebase Specify rulebase as the file containing nawk(1) pattern-action statements.
-r rootdir Specify rootdir as the directory under which dev and devices will be found, rather than the standard root directory /.
FILES
/usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk sample rule-base for compatibility links
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWscpu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO devlinks(1M), disks(1M), ports(1M), tapes(1M), attributes(5)SunOS 5.10 13 Apr 1994 ucblinks(1B)