Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers sed to isolate file paths separated by a pattern Post 302310456 by devtakh on Friday 24th of April 2009 11:46:28 PM
Old 04-25-2009
many ways to achive this

cat filename | tr "@" "\n"

or

awk 'BEGIN{RS="@"}{print}' filename


or

sed '/\@/s//\n/g' filename


cheers,
Devaraj Takhellambam
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Isolate and Extract a Pattern Substring (Digits Only)

Hi guys, I have a text file report generated from egrepping multiple files. The text files themselves are obtianed after many succesive refinements, so they contain already the desired number, but this is surrounded by unwanted characters, newlines, spaces, it is not always at the start of the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: netfreighter
6 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

validate a pattern of numbers that are comma separated

Hi, I have a requirement wherein, I need to validate a user input of the numbers that are comma separated. E.g . The input should be in the format 1,2,3...n (count of numbers is not known) . The user has to mention the input in this format, else it should exit from the program. ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: 12345
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

SED: Removing Filenames From Paths

I'm using a script with a lot of SED commands, in conjunction with grep, cut, etc. I've come up against a wall with a particular road block: I output a file from an SVN registry that gives me a list of files. The list consists of a variable number of lines that contain a path/file. The paths... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Brusimm
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk: isolate a part of a file name

hi there, i have a file named 'x20080613_x20100106.pwr1.gc', i want to isolate the part 'x20080613_x20100106' but by using the following line i isolate the part '.pwr1.gc': `awk '$0=substr($0, length($0)-7)' $temp` how can i reverse that? thank you! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: friend
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Store and isolate bad pages from a file to new file

I have a file like below . The good pages must have 3 conditions : The pages that containing page total only must have 50 lines. The pages that containing customer total only must have 53 lines. The last page of Customer Total should be the last page. How can I accomplish separating good... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ehabaziz2001
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

I need to isolate a date in a large log file

I wrote head -n1 example.log I grab the first line of the log, but I need to isolate just the date, which is 08/May/2012:09:52:52. I also need to find the reverse of this, which would be tail... http://i.imgur.com/Lp1eBD0.png Thanks in advance (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: spookydll
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to use sed to search a particular pattern in a file backward after a pattern is matched.?

Hi, I have two files file1.txt and file2.txt. Please see the attachments. In file2.txt (which actually is a diff output between two versions of file1.txt.), I extract the pattern corresponding to 1172c1172. Now ,In file1.txt I have to search for this pattern 1172c1172 and if found, I have to... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: saurabh kumar
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Isolate text with sed or similar utility

All, I'm getting a list like the following and I'd like to kill each PID in turn. pid (17797) pid (21748) pid (21754) pid (21704) pid (2199) pid (2159) pid (17809) pid (21769) pid (21778) pid (21715) ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ejianu
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed -- Find pattern -- print remainder -- plus lines up to pattern -- Minus pattern

The intended result should be : PDF converters 'empty line' gpdftext and pdftotext?xml version="1.0"?> xml:space="preserve"><note-content version="0.1" xmlns:/tomboy/link" xmlns:size="http://beatniksoftware.com/tomboy/size">PDF converters gpdftext and pdftotext</note-content>... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Klasform
9 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Strip the first record off a file and isolate fields off of it

I have a 2 part question on how to this in unix scripting using kshell or c shell. I have a file described below: 1st record has 2 fields on it every other record has 22 fields on it. Example ABC, email address Detail 1 Detail 2 Detail 3 . . . 1st question is... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jclanc8
4 Replies
SED(1)							      General Commands Manual							    SED(1)

NAME
sed - stream editor SYNOPSIS
sed [ -gln ] [ -e script ] [ -f sfile ] [ file ... ] DESCRIPTION
Sed copies the named files (standard input default) to the standard output, edited according to a script of commands. The -f option causes the script to be taken from file sfile; these options accumulate. If there is just one -e option and no -f's, the flag -e may be omitted. The -n option suppresses the default output; -g causes all substitutions to be global, as if suffixed g. The -l option causes sed to flush its output buffer after every newline. A script consists of editing commands, one per line, of the following form: [address [, address] ] function [argument ...] In normal operation sed cyclically copies a line of input into a pattern space (unless there is something left after a command), applies in sequence all commands whose addresses select that pattern space, and at the end of the script copies the pattern space to the standard out- put (except under -n) and deletes the pattern space. An address is either a decimal number that counts input lines cumulatively across files, a that addresses the last line of input, or a con- text address, /regular-expression/, in the style of regexp(7), with the added convention that matches a newline embedded in the pattern space. A command line with no addresses selects every pattern space. A command line with one address selects each pattern space that matches the address. A command line with two addresses selects the inclusive range from the first pattern space that matches the first address through the next pattern space that matches the second. (If the second address is a number less than or equal to the line number first selected, only one line is selected.) Thereafter the process is repeated, looking again for the first address. Editing commands can be applied to non-selected pattern spaces by use of the negation function (below). An argument denoted text consists of one or more lines, all but the last of which end with to hide the newline. Backslashes in text are treated like backslashes in the replacement string of an command, and may be used to protect initial blanks and tabs against the stripping that is done on every script line. An argument denoted rfile or wfile must terminate the command line and must be preceded by exactly one blank. Each wfile is created before processing begins. There can be at most 120 distinct wfile arguments. a text Append. Place text on the output before reading the next input line. b label Branch to the : command bearing the label. If label is empty, branch to the end of the script. c text Change. Delete the pattern space. With 0 or 1 address or at the end of a 2-address range, place text on the output. Start the next cycle. d Delete the pattern space. Start the next cycle. D Delete the initial segment of the pattern space through the first newline. Start the next cycle. g Replace the contents of the pattern space by the contents of the hold space. G Append the contents of the hold space to the pattern space. h Replace the contents of the hold space by the contents of the pattern space. H Append the contents of the pattern space to the hold space. i text Insert. Place text on the standard output. n Copy the pattern space to the standard output. Replace the pattern space with the next line of input. N Append the next line of input to the pattern space with an embedded newline. (The current line number changes.) p Print. Copy the pattern space to the standard output. P Copy the initial segment of the pattern space through the first newline to the standard output. q Quit. Branch to the end of the script. Do not start a new cycle. r rfile Read the contents of rfile. Place them on the output before reading the next input line. s/regular-expression/replacement/flags Substitute the replacement string for instances of the regular-expression in the pattern space. Any character may be used instead of For a fuller description see regexp(7). Flags is zero or more of g Global. Substitute for all non-overlapping instances of the regular expression rather than just the first one. p Print the pattern space if a replacement was made. w wfile Write. Append the pattern space to wfile if a replacement was made. t label Test. Branch to the command bearing the label if any substitutions have been made since the most recent reading of an input line or execution of a If label is empty, branch to the end of the script. w wfile Write. Append the pattern space to wfile. x Exchange the contents of the pattern and hold spaces. y/string1/string2/ Transform. Replace all occurrences of characters in string1 with the corresponding character in string2. The lengths of string1 and string2 must be equal. !function Don't. Apply the function (or group, if function is only to lines not selected by the address(es). : label This command does nothing; it bears a label for b and t commands to branch to. = Place the current line number on the standard output as a line. { Execute the following commands through a matching only when the pattern space is selected. An empty command is ignored. EXAMPLES
sed 10q file Print the first 10 lines of the file. sed '/^$/d' Delete empty lines from standard input. sed 's/UNIX/& system/g' Replace every instance of by sed 's/ *$// drop trailing blanks /^$/d drop empty lines s/ */ replace blanks by newlines /g /^$/d' chapter* Print the files chapter1, chapter2, etc. one word to a line. nroff -ms manuscript | sed ' ${ /^$/p if last line of file is empty, print it } //N if current line is empty, append next line /^ $/D' if two lines are empty, delete the first Delete all but one of each group of empty lines from a formatted manuscript. SOURCE
/src/cmd/sed.c SEE ALSO
ed(1), grep(1), awk(1), lex(1), sam(1), regexp(7) L. E. McMahon, `SED -- A Non-interactive Text Editor', Unix Research System Programmer's Manual, Volume 2. BUGS
If input is from a pipe, buffering may consume characters beyond a line on which a command is executed. SED(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:30 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy