i'm new to shell scripting and have a problem please help me
in the script i have a nawk block which has a variable count
nawk{
.
.
.
count=count+1
print count
}
now i want to access the value of the count variable outside the awk block,like..
s=`expr count / m`
(m is... (5 Replies)
HI guys,
I have created a script to read 1 column in a csv file and then place it in text file.
However, when i checked out the text file, it is not in a column format...
Example:
CSV file contains
name,age
aa,11
bb,22
cc,33
After using awk to get first column
TXT file... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have the following file that has computer data for various pcs in my network...
Snap of the file is as follows
*******************************************************************************
Serial
123456
Computer IP Address
lo0:... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have an xml file with the below format.
<a>111</a><b>222</b><c>333<c><d><e>123</e><f>234</f><d><e>456</e><f>789</f>
output needed is
111,222,333,123,234
111,222,333,456,789
nawk 'BEGIN{FS="<|>"}
{print a,b,c,e,f
a=""
... (7 Replies)
Hi! I have a file which I want to search daily for any line that contains the work 'Reason' and I want to take that line and put the data in a certain format using awk or nawk....I do not have gawk on my machine so it would have to be awk or nawk, or sed would work as well. Here are some examples... (9 Replies)
Hi all,
I try to make a awk-script, which counts lines, summarized by pdf and xml.
So far it works, but for sorting reasons, I'd like to change the format from the field $1 from dd-mm-yyyy to yyyy-mm-dd.
This works find, but: split() and sprintf() prints its output (for no reason, the results... (2 Replies)
Looking for some help and usually when I do a search this site comes up. Hopefully someone can give me a little direction as to how to use one of these two commands to achieve what I'm trying to do.
What am I trying to do?
I need to take the time value in epoch format returned from the... (5 Replies)
Hi, Guys,
There is one question about AWK format. Here is the code:
gawk -F: '/^Dan/ {print "Dan's phone number is ",$2}' lab3.data
An syntax error will come out because the quote mark between Dan and s and first quote mark are recognized as a quote pair.
I want to get the input like this:... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file where I need to change the date format on the nth field from DD-MM-YYYY to YYYY-MM-DD so I can accurately sort the record by dates
From regex - Use sed or awk to fix date format - Stack Overflow, I found an example using nawk.
Test run as below:
$: cat xyz.txt
A ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
perldbmfilter
PERLDBMFILTER(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLDBMFILTER(1)NAME
perldbmfilter - Perl DBM Filters
SYNOPSIS
$db = tie %hash, 'DBM', ...
$old_filter = $db->filter_store_key ( sub { ... } );
$old_filter = $db->filter_store_value( sub { ... } );
$old_filter = $db->filter_fetch_key ( sub { ... } );
$old_filter = $db->filter_fetch_value( sub { ... } );
DESCRIPTION
The four "filter_*" methods shown above are available in all the DBM modules that ship with Perl, namely DB_File, GDBM_File, NDBM_File,
ODBM_File and SDBM_File.
Each of the methods works identically, and is used to install (or uninstall) a single DBM Filter. The only difference between them is the
place that the filter is installed.
To summarise:
filter_store_key
If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked every time you write a key to a DBM database.
filter_store_value
If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked every time you write a value to a DBM database.
filter_fetch_key
If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked every time you read a key from a DBM database.
filter_fetch_value
If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked every time you read a value from a DBM database.
You can use any combination of the methods from none to all four.
All filter methods return the existing filter, if present, or "undef" if not.
To delete a filter pass "undef" to it.
The Filter
When each filter is called by Perl, a local copy of $_ will contain the key or value to be filtered. Filtering is achieved by modifying the
contents of $_. The return code from the filter is ignored.
An Example: the NULL termination problem.
DBM Filters are useful for a class of problems where you always want to make the same transformation to all keys, all values or both.
For example, consider the following scenario. You have a DBM database that you need to share with a third-party C application. The C
application assumes that all keys and values are NULL terminated. Unfortunately when Perl writes to DBM databases it doesn't use NULL
termination, so your Perl application will have to manage NULL termination itself. When you write to the database you will have to use
something like this:
$hash{"$key "} = "$value ";
Similarly the NULL needs to be taken into account when you are considering the length of existing keys/values.
It would be much better if you could ignore the NULL terminations issue in the main application code and have a mechanism that
automatically added the terminating NULL to all keys and values whenever you write to the database and have them removed when you read from
the database. As I'm sure you have already guessed, this is a problem that DBM Filters can fix very easily.
use strict;
use warnings;
use SDBM_File;
use Fcntl;
my %hash;
my $filename = "filt";
unlink $filename;
my $db = tie(%hash, 'SDBM_File', $filename, O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0640)
or die "Cannot open $filename: $!
";
# Install DBM Filters
$db->filter_fetch_key ( sub { s/ $// } );
$db->filter_store_key ( sub { $_ .= "