05-14-2009
go look at the "More UNIX and Linux Forum Topics You Might Find Helpful" at the top of this page and see if any of them fits your bill
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I have two files that I need to find difference between. Do I use diff or join? If join, how do I use it?
thanks,
webtekie (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: webtekie
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
Could anyone help me ?
I'm trying to join two files, but no common field are on them. So I think on generate \000\ sequence to add for each line on both files, so then will be able to join these files.
Any idea?
Thanks in advance, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Manu
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Greetings, all. I've got a project that requires I join two data files together, then do some processing and output. Everything must be done in a shell script, using standard unix tools. The files look like the following:
File_1
Layout:
Acct#,Subacct#,Descrip
Sample:
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rjlohman
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have many text file reports generated by a Information Assurance tool that I need to get into a .CSV format or Excel tab delimited format. I want to use sed or awk to grab all the information in the sample text file below and create column headings:Risk ID, Risk Level, Category, Description, How... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bjoeboo
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
I need help in modifying a large text file containing more than 1-2 lakh rows of data using unix commands. I am quite new to the unix language
the text file contains data in a pipe delimited format
sdfsdfs
sdfsdfsd
START_ROW
sdfsd|sdfsdfsd|sdfsdfasdf|sdfsadf|sdfasdf... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: manish2009
9 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have three files
file a has contents
123
234
238
file b has contents
189
567
567
and file c has contents
qwe
ert
ery (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tomjones
1 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have two comma separated files.
I want to join those filesa nd put the result in separate file.
smaple data are:
file1:
A1,1,100
A2,1,200
B1,2,100
B2,2,200
file2
1,50
1,25
1,25
1,100
1,100
2,50
2,50 (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: pandeesh
10 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have about 20 tab delimited text files that have non sequential numbering such as:
UCD2.summary.txt
UCD45.summary.txt
UCD56.summery.txt
The first column of each file has the same number of lines and content. The next 2 column have data points:
i.e UCD2.summary.txt:
a 8.9 ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rrdavis
8 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
File "A" (column names: Nickname Number GB)
Nickname Number GB
PROD_DB0034 100A 16
ASMIL1B_DATA_003 100B 16
PSPROD_0000 1014 36
PSPROD_0001 100D 223
.....
File "B" (column names: TYPE DEVICE NUMBER SIZE)
TYPE DEVICE NUMBER SIZE
1750500 hdisk2 100A 16384
1750500 hdisk3 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Daniel Gate
4 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have two files with the below contents :
sampleoutput3.txt
20150202;hostname1
20150223;hostname2
20150716;hostname3
sampleoutput1.txt
hostname;packages_out_of_date;errata_out_of_date;
hostname1;11;0;
hostnamea;12;0;
hostnameb;11;0;
hostnamec;95;38;
hostnamed;440;358;... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahul2662
2 Replies
pfscut(1) General Commands Manual pfscut(1)
NAME
pfscut - Extract a rectangle out of a frame in PFS stream
SYNOPSIS
pfscut [--left <columns>] [--right <columns>] [--top <rows>] [--bottom <rows>] [--width <new_width>] [--height <new_height>] [--help] [x_ul
y_ul x_br y_br]
DESCRIPTION
Extract a rectangle out of each frame in PFS stream. You can either specify x and y coordinates of upper left and lower right corner (the
coordinates start with 0 and rise in the left-to-right and up-to-botton directions) or give a combination of the options listed below.
OPTIONS
--left <columns>, -l <columns>
Number of columns to be cut out from the left edge of an image.
--right <columns>, -r <columns>
Number of columns to be cut out from the right edge of an image.
--top <rows>, -t <rows>
Number of rows to be cut out from the top edge of an image.
--bottom <rows>, -b <rows>
Number of rows to be cut out from the bottom edge of an image.
--width <new_width>, -W <new_width>
Width of an output image. Note that --width can be mixed with either --left or --right option.
--height <new_height>, -H <new_height>
Height of an output image. Note that --height can be mixed with either --top or --bottom option.
--help, -h
Print a list of commandline options.
EXAMPLES
pfsin image.hdr | pfscut --left 20 --top 5 | pfsout out.hdr
Cut out 20 columns from the left and 5 rows from the top edge of image.hdr and save frame as out.hdr.
pfsin image.hdr | pfscut --left 20 --width 400 | pfsout out.hdr
Cut out 20 columns from the left edge of image.hdr, and create output image 400 pixels in width.
pfsin image.hdr | pfscut 0 0 511 511 | pfsout out.hdr
Cut left-upper part of the image of the size 512x512 (note that coordinates start with 0 and 512 is the last row/column that is
included in the resulting image).
SEE ALSO
pfsin(1) pfsout(1)
BUGS
Please report bugs and comments to Dorota Zdrojewska <dzdrojewska@wi.ps.pl>.
pfscut(1)