Hi all,
Sorry the title is a mess, but did not find a better description at the time.
So here is my problem:
I have an input file:
8:Mass40s -- 0
48:Mass40s -- 0
67:Mass40s -- 0
86:Mass40s -- 0
105:Mass40s -- 0
9:Mass -- 1
49:Mass -- 86... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that has data in it that says
00:01:48.233 1212
00:01:56.233 345
00:09:01.221 5678
00:12:23.321 93444
The file has more line than this but i just wanted to put in a snippet to ask how I would get the highest number with time stamp into another file. So from the above... (2 Replies)
In some cases I would like to sort by index, in some cases by color and in some cases by Callsign. Can this be done? :D
vector< vector<string> > table;
vector<string> row;
row.push_back("1");row.push_back("green");row.push_back("alpha");
table.push_back(row);... (0 Replies)
First, thanks for the help in previous posts... couldn't have gotten where I am now without it!
So here is what I have, I use AWK to match $1 and $2 as 1 string in file1 to $1 and $2 as 1 string in file2. Now I'm wondering if I can extend this AWK command to incorporate the following:
If $1... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files, one of which I would like to sort based on the order of the data in the second. I would like to do this using a simple unix statement.
My two files as follows:
File 1:
12345 1 2 2 2 0 0
12349 0 0 2 2 1 2
12350 1 2 1 2 2 2
.
.
.
File2:
12350... (3 Replies)
the below is sorted as it is. the fields that i'm interested in are the 4th and 5th field.
i want to sort the based on the 4th field.
my past attempt to do this was to do something like this:
awk '{print $4}'| awk '{print $1":"$2}' datafile | sort | uniq
however, if i do that, i lose... (2 Replies)
Oracle Enterprise Linux 6
This is my file. Two fields separated by space
$ cat testfile.txt
MARCH9 MARCH4
MARCH1 MARCH5
MARCH2 MARCH326
MARCH821 MARCH7
MARCH6 MARCH2
$
$
The following numeric sort, based on the first field's 6th character works as expected.
$
$ sort -n -k 1.6... (7 Replies)
Dear Team,
Can any body help me out to get the filed position of the records post sorting using AWK programming.
Thanks in advance
Example Input:
StudentID col-1 col-2 col-3 col-4
1234 14 10 12 13
1235 10 11 12 13
1236 13 12 11 10 ... (3 Replies)
OK below is what my sample file looks like. I need to sort by the Primary Key ie: {1:F01SAESVAV0AXXX0466020126} in the first record. Record seperator is $.
I tried sort, but it completely messes it up. I am thinking I will need to use something like awk which understands the record seperator... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: alfredo123
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
cat
cat(1) General Commands Manual cat(1)Name
cat - concatenate and print data
Syntax
cat [ -b ] [ -e ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -u ] [ -v ] file...
Description
The command reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Therefore, to display the file on the standard output you
type:
cat file
To concatenate two files and place the result on the third you type:
cat file1 file2 > file3
To concatenate two files and append them to a third you type:
cat file1 file2 >> file3
If no input file is given, or if a minus sign (-) is encountered as an argument, reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in
1024-byte blocks unless the standard output is a terminal, in which case it is line buffered. The utility supports the processing of 8-bit
characters.
Options-b Ignores blank lines and precedes each output line with its line number.
-e Displays a dollar sign ($) 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 Alsocp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)cat(1)