Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Gawk combining lines unexpectedly Post 302310361 by demanche on Friday 24th of April 2009 12:28:53 PM
Old 04-24-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by giannicello
What happens when you do this:

Code:
sed -e :a -e '/\.$/N; s/\.\n//; ta' filename

When I run the sed command the ouput still contains some unwanted newlines, this is the output after running the suggested command:


2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here
info.
Info.
Info.
data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here
Info.
Info.
Info.
data here )}

What I need is:

2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here. info. Info. Info. data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here )}
2009-04-14 14:51:22 access data here. info. Info. Info. data here )}




The purpose of all this is that its easier to merge files and sort once each line has a timestamp.


Edit: The only definate is that the lines I need to merge starts with 2009 and ends with )}

Last edited by demanche; 04-24-2009 at 01:59 PM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Combining multiple lines

I am fairly new to scripting. But I have been able to extract and format all of my information required into one file. My issue is that one character is on a separate line. I need to be able to add the character to the previous line. ex. abcdefghi 1 bcdefghij 3 cdefghijk 4 need to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: DUST
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

need help appending lines/combining lines within a file...

Is there a way to combine two lines onto a single line...append the following line onto the previous line? I have the following file that contains some blank lines and some lines I would like to append to the previous line... current file: checking dsk c19t2d6 checking dsk c19t2d7 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mr_manny
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

combining lines in files

hey, I want to combine every three lines in a file onto one i.e old file: 82 67 32 62 58 39 29 47 58 27 34 50 27 35 69 38 58 70 new file: 82 67 32 62 58 39 29 47 58 27 34 50 27 25 69 38 58 70 At the moment I am using the following code: gawk 'BEGIN {x=0} { if(x<3)... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: sme
14 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

gawk print some special lines

Hi every body, i have this file example : TD1 TD2 TD3 . . .TDn <DIE_1> xxxxxx <\DIE_1> <TD1> information 1 inormation n <\TD1> <TDq> information (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kamel.kimo
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Combining two text lines into one

Here is the sample file: 646 STARTED Tue Dec 30 06:38:53 2008 Job DdCustXAddr_brad has been reset. 647 STARTED Tue Dec 30 06:38:54 2008 Starting Job DdCustXAddr_brad. (...) 704 STARTED Tue Dec 30 06:49:02 2008 Job DdCustXAddr_brad aborted. I want to combine every non-numbered line... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mfavero
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Joining lines of a text file using GAWK

sir... am having a data file of customer master., containing some important fields as a set one line after another., what i want is to have one set of these fields(rows) one after another in line.........then the second set... and so on... till the last set completed. ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: KANNI786
0 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging Adjacent Lines Using Gawk

Hi all, I have a text file consisting of 4 columns. What I am trying to do is see whether column 2 repeats multiple times, and collapse those repeats into one row. For example, here is a snippet of the file I am trying to analyze: 1 Gamble_Win 14.282 0.502 1 Sure_Thing 14.858 0.174 1... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jahn
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Combining lines between two specific lines

Hi, I have a requirement like following: I have input file like: Question: 1 ----Multiple choice--- What is your favourite colour? Options: a) red b) blue c) none of these Question: 2 ---Multiple choice----- In which month did you join your first job? Options: a) Jan b) Feb c)... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: ppatra
11 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Reading two lines in a while loop and combining the lines

Dear all, I have a file like this: imput scaffold_0 1 scaffold_0 10000 scaffold_0 20000 scaffold_0 25000 scaffold_1 1 scaffold_1 10000 scaffold_1 20000 scaffold_1 23283 and I want the output like this: scaffold_0 1 scaffold_0 10000 scaffold_0 10000 scaffold_0 20000... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: valente
6 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Gawk Find Pattern Print Lines Before and After

Using grep I can easily use: cvs log |grep -iB 10 -A 10 'date: 2013-10-30' to display search results and 10 lines before and after. How can this be accompished using gawk? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
4 Replies
fntsample(1)						      General Commands Manual						      fntsample(1)

NAME
fntsample - PDF and PostScript font samples generator SYNOPSIS
fntsample [ OPTIONS ] -f FONT-FILE -o OUTPUT-FILE fntsample -h DESCRIPTION
fntsample program can be used to generate font samples that show Unicode coverage of the font and are similar in appearance to Unicode charts. Samples can be saved into PDF (default) or PostScript file. OPTIONS
fntsample supports the following options. --font-file, -f FONT-FILE Make samples of FONT-FILE. --font-index, -n IDX Font index for FONT-FILE specified using --font-file option. Useful for files that contain multiple fonts, like TrueType Collec- tions (.ttc). By default font with index 0 is used. --output-file, -o OUTPUT-FILE Write output to OUTPUT-FILE. --other-font-file, -d OTHER-FONT Compare FONT-FILE with OTHER-FONT. Glyphs added to FONT-FILE will be highlighted. --other-index, -m IDX Font index for OTHER-FONT specified using --other-font-file option. --postscript-output, -s Use PostScript format for output instead of PDF. --svg, -g Use SVG format for output. The generated document contains one page. Use range selection options to specify which. --print-outline, -l Print document outlines data to standard output. This data can be used to add outlines (aka bookmarks) to resulting PDF file with pdfoutline program. --include-range, -i RANGE Show characters in RANGE. --exclude-range, -x RANGE Do not show characters in RANGE. --style, -t "STYLE: VAL" Set STYLE to value VAL. Run fntsample with option --help to see list of styles and default values. --help, -h Display help text and exit. Parameter RANGE for -i and -x can be given as one integer or a pair of integers delimited by minus sign (-). Integers can be specified in decimal, hexadecimal (0x...) or octal (0...) format. One integer of a pair can be missing (-N can be used to specify all characters with codes less or equal to N, and N- for all characters with codes greather or equal to N). Multiple -i and -x options can be used. EXAMPLES
Make PDF samples for font.ttf and write them to file samples.pdf: fntsample -f font.ttf -o samples.pdf Make PDF samples for font.ttf, compare it with oldfont.ttf and highlight new glyphs. Write output to file samples.pdf: fntsample -f font.ttf -d oldfont.ttf -o samples.pdf Make PostScript samples for font.ttf and write output to file samples.ps. Show only glyphs for characters with codes less or equal to U+04FF but exclude U+0370-U+03FF: fntsample -f font.ttf -s -o samples.ps -i -0x04FF -x 0x0370-0x03FF Make PDF samples for font.ttf and save output to file samples.pdf adding outlines to it: fntsample -f font.ttf -o temp.pdf -l > outlines.txt pdfoutline temp.pdf outlines.txt samples.pdf AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2007 Eugeniy Meshcheryakov <eugen@debian.org> Homepage: <http://fntsample.sourceforge.net/> SEE ALSO
pdfoutline(1) 2010-10-14 fntsample(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:59 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy