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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting compare strings, words in different order Post 302299574 by joeyg on Friday 20th of March 2009 11:41:45 AM
Old 03-20-2009
Hammer & Screwdriver the start of a process

three files (your inputs); converted so each character is on its own line
Code:
> cat file1
A B C
> cat file1 | tr " " "\n" >file1a
> cat file2 
B C A
> cat file2 | tr " " "\n" >file2a
> cat file3
A D C
> cat file3 | tr " " "\n" >file3a

I egrep the 2nd file against the first, and the reult is three items
Code:
> cat file1a | egrep -f file2a
A
B
C

I egrep the 3rd file against the first, but the result is two items
Code:
> cat file1a | egrep -f file3a
A
C

So, assigning the number of lines (wc -l) to a variable, you can compare the number at the end of each process. This (command codes) can be simplified in areas, but I did it this way to help illustrate the process for you.
 

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cat(1)							      General Commands Manual							    cat(1)

Name
       cat - concatenate and print data

Syntax
       cat [ -b ] [ -e ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -u ] [ -v ] file...

Description
       The  command reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output.  Therefore, to display the file on the standard output you
       type:
       cat file
       To concatenate two files and place the result on the third you type:
       cat file1 file2 > file3
       To concatenate two files and append them to a third you type:
       cat file1 file2 >> file3
       If no input file is given, or if a minus sign (-) is encountered as an argument, reads from the standard input file.  Output is buffered in
       1024-byte blocks unless the standard output is a terminal, in which case it is line buffered.  The utility supports the processing of 8-bit
       characters.

Options
       -b   Ignores blank lines and precedes each output line with its line number.

       -e   Displays a dollar sign ($) at the end of each output line.

       -n   Precedes all output lines (including blank lines) with line numbers.

       -s   Squeezes adjacent blank lines from output and single spaces output.

       -t   Displays non-printing characters (including tabs) in output.  In addition to those representations used with the -v  option,  all  tab
	    characters are displayed as ^I.

       -u   Unbuffers output.

       -v   Displays  non-printing  characters (excluding tabs and newline) as the ^x.	If the character is in the range octal 0177 to octal 0241,
	    it is displayed as M-x. The delete character (octal 0177) displays as ^?.  For example, is displayed as ^X.

See Also
       cp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)

																	    cat(1)
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