If the original poster was close enough for only this to remain:
Quote:
What's the best way to re-order the above line according to my CSV needs? Or is there a different approach I should be taking entirely?
and if he could change his output separator from " " to some other character, say "@" it would be a simple matter of
What about the xlstproc post, that seemed easy, complete and correct?
I need to know the way. I have got parsing down some nodes. But I was unable to get the child node perfectly. If you have code please send it. It will be very useful for me. (0 Replies)
Hi! I'm just new here and don't know much about shell scripting. I just want to ask for help in creating a shell script that will parse a string or value of the status in the xml file. Please sample xml file below. Can you please help me create a simple script to get the value of status? Also it... (46 Replies)
Hi All,
I have been working on something that doesn't seem to have a clear regex solution and I just wanted to run it by everyone to see if I could get some insight into the method of solving this problem.
I have a flat text file that contains billing records for users, however the records... (5 Replies)
Hi Everybody,
I have an XML file containing some data and i want to extract it, but the specific issue in my file is that the data is repeated some times like the following example :
<section1>
<subsection1>
X=...
Y=...
Z=...
<\subsection1>
<subsection2>
X=...
Y=...
Z=...... (2 Replies)
Enclosed is comma separated text file. I need to write a korn shell program that will parse the text file and insert the values into Oracle database.
I need to write the korn shell program on Red Hat Enterprise Linux server.
Oracle database is 10g. (15 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to parse some statistic data from the "measInfo" -eg. 25250000 (as highlighted) and return the result into line by line, and erasing all other unnecessary info/tag.
Thought of starting with grep "measInfoID="25250000" but this only returns 1 line. How do I get all the output... (8 Replies)
Hello !
I am very aware that this is not the first time this question is asked here, because I have already read a lot of previous answers, but none of them worked, so...
As said in the title, I want to read a csv file with a bash script.
Here is a sample of the file:
... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
Hope all you are doing good! Need your help. I have an XML file which needs to be converted CSV file. I am not an expert of awk/sed so your help is highly appreciated!!
XML file looks like this:
<l:event dateTime="2013-03-13 07:15:54.713" layerName="OSB" processName="ABC"... (2 Replies)
Hello gurus,
I have a csv file with bunch of datas in each column. (see attached)
Now I have an .xml file in the structure of below:
?xml version="1.0" ?>
<component id="root" name="root">
<component id="system" name="system">
<param name="number_of_A" value="8"/>
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Zam_1234
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
ppmtopgm
ppmtopgm(1) General Commands Manual ppmtopgm(1)NAME
ppmtopgm - convert a portable pixmap into a portable graymap
SYNOPSIS
ppmtopgm [ppmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Produces a portable graymap as output. The output is a "black and white" rendering of the original
image, as in a black and white photograph. The quantization formula used is .299 r + .587 g + .114 b.
Note that although there is a pgmtoppm program, it is not necessary for simple conversions from pgm to ppm , because any ppm program can
read pgm (and pbm ) files automatically. pgmtoppm is for colorizing a pgm file. Also, see ppmtorgb3 for a different way of converting
color to gray. And ppmdist generates a grayscale image from a color image, but in a way that makes it easy to differentiate the original
colors, not necessarily a way that looks like a black and white photograph.
QUOTE
Cold-hearted orb that rules the night
Removes the colors from our sight
Red is gray, and yellow white
But we decide which is right
And which is a quantization error.
SEE ALSO pgmtoppm(1),ppmtorgb3(1),rgb3toppm(1),ppmdist(1),ppm(5),pgm(5)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
10 April 2000 ppmtopgm(1)