hello all
I have long awk function that doing manipulations on text file but when I write the out put to new text file I have carriage return between 2 print commands
How can I avoid this ?
Here is my awk :
echo $f | awk... (1 Reply)
I have a file with the record of person:
cat > $TMP/record.txt
John Torres M Single 102353 Address
Mark Santos M Maried 103001 Address
Carla Maria F Maried 125653 Address
#!/bin/ksh
ManipulateID(){
...
return 0;
... #or
return 1;
}
cat $TMP/record.txt | awk 'BEGIN {printf... (4 Replies)
I'm a bit stuck in getting variable from awk to shell. I tried searching but most of them showing to assign to shell variable via..
VAR=`echo $line | awk -F: '{print $1}'`
which is correct ofcourse
My problem is multiple assignments of variable like this one. The above solution will give... (10 Replies)
Hi
I have 2 working script, now i'd like to get the return value from the first and give it to the 2 script (both script work correctly if I run it separately). so i think the problem is only the first line in the way i pass the variable.
in the final the "print lst", is just to check the... (2 Replies)
Hello, I am using awk to process a file, and need to return a row that meets specific criteria.
awk 'BEGIN{sets variables}
{processes file, updates variables}
END{need to print a row that meets the criteria in one of the variables}
I have tried code in the END block like {print NR==var}... (1 Reply)
I have a string with the following information and want to return the number of entries enclosed by <> in awk
<stdin>: N = 441 <0.369000018/0.569000006> <0.369000018/0.569000006> <0/1> (7 Replies)
I have the following awk script that I am using to find the max value in the file and print results.
awk 'BEGIN {MAX=-1E100} {for (x=2; x<=NF; x++) if ($x>MAX) {MAX = $x; C1 = $1}} END {print substr(C1,1,11), substr(C1,13,4), substr(C1,18,2), MAX}' ABC*
Input (ABC*)
... (6 Replies)
What is an awk command to print only fields with a number in it??
Input file.......
S,S,S,S,S,S,S,S,S
001S,S,S,S,S,S,S,S,S
00219S,23S,24S,43S,47S,S,S,S,S
00319S,10S,23S,41S,43S,47S,S,S,S
00423S,41S,43S,46S,47S,S,S,S,S
00510S,23S,24S,43S,46S,S,S,S,S
00610S,23S,43S,46S,47S,S,S,S,S... (2 Replies)
The below awk is used with the attached index.html and matches the specific user id in the sub portion with path of /rundb/api/v1/plugin/49/. The command does run but the output is blank. Something changed in the file structure as it used to work.
So using the first line in the output:
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
2 Replies
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perlcc
PERLCC(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLCC(1)NAME
perlcc - generate executables from Perl programs
SYNOPSIS
$ perlcc hello # Compiles into executable 'a.out'
$ perlcc -o hello hello.pl # Compiles into executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -O file # Compiles using the optimised C backend
$ perlcc -B file # Compiles using the bytecode backend
$ perlcc -c file # Creates a C file, 'file.c'
$ perlcc -S -o hello file # Creates a C file, 'file.c',
# then compiles it to executable 'hello'
$ perlcc -c out.c file # Creates a C file, 'out.c' from 'file'
$ perlcc -e 'print q//' # Compiles a one-liner into 'a.out'
$ perlcc -c -e 'print q//' # Creates a C file 'a.out.c'
$ perlcc -I /foo hello # extra headers (notice the space after -I)
$ perlcc -L /foo hello # extra libraries (notice the space after -L)
$ perlcc -r hello # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
$ perlcc -r hello a b c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out', runs 'a.out'.
# with arguments 'a b c'
$ perlcc hello -log c # compiles 'hello' into 'a.out' logs compile
# log into 'c'.
DESCRIPTION
perlcc creates standalone executables from Perl programs, using the code generators provided by the B module. At present, you may either
create executable Perl bytecode, using the "-B" option, or generate and compile C files using the standard and 'optimised' C backends.
The code generated in this way is not guaranteed to work. The whole codegen suite ("perlcc" included) should be considered very experimen-
tal. Use for production purposes is strongly discouraged.
OPTIONS -Llibrary directories
Adds the given directories to the library search path when C code is passed to your C compiler.
-Iinclude directories
Adds the given directories to the include file search path when C code is passed to your C compiler; when using the Perl bytecode
option, adds the given directories to Perl's include path.
-o output file name
Specifies the file name for the final compiled executable.
-c C file name
Create C code only; do not compile to a standalone binary.
-e perl code
Compile a one-liner, much the same as "perl -e '...'"
-S Do not delete generated C code after compilation.
-B Use the Perl bytecode code generator.
-O Use the 'optimised' C code generator. This is more experimental than everything else put together, and the code created is not guaran-
teed to compile in finite time and memory, or indeed, at all.
-v Increase verbosity of output; can be repeated for more verbose output.
-r Run the resulting compiled script after compiling it.
-log
Log the output of compiling to a file rather than to stdout.
perl v5.8.9 2009-06-25 PERLCC(1)