In your example it looks like you have groups of 3 lines of text followed by 2 lines. You want to combine the three lines of text into a single line and remove the two separating lines completely.
If this is the case:
This will first read two additional lines (to the first read line) from the file and combine these into the pattern space. The first replacement then throws out the control characters (^M and ^Y, enter them via <CTRL-V> in vi), the second replacement removes the newline characters combining the lines to one line and prints it. Then two additional lines (the separator lines) are read and discarded, since they are not printed at all, then repeat from start.
Hi,
I have a situation where I want to replace some occurrences of ".jsp" into ".html" inside a text file.
For Example:
If a pattern found like <a href="http://www.mysite.com/mypage.jsp"> it should be retained.
But if a pattern found like <a href="../mypage.jsp"> it should be changed to... (4 Replies)
Hi I'm trying to replace text in a file based upon a pattern.
The pattern I'm looking for is:
<styleURL>#style0002</styleURL>
<name>#######6105#######</name>The # are seven alphanumeric characters before and after 6105.
I need it to replace that with this recursively:
... (4 Replies)
Hi
I need to create multiple text files from onc text file on AIX. The data of text files is as below:
**********************************************
**********************************************
DBVERIFY: Release 10.2.0.4.0 - Production on Tue Nov 10 13:45:42 2009
Copyright (c) 1982,... (11 Replies)
i am editing a big log file with the following pattern:
Date: xxxx Updated: name
Some log file text here
Date: eee Updated: ny
Some log file text here
Basically i want to remove all the text in a line before the "Updated" pattern. I sill want to print the other... (4 Replies)
Can someone help me with a sed command:
There will be multiple occurences in a file that look like this:
MyFunction(12c34r5)
and I need to replace that with just the 12c34r5 for every occurrence. The text between the parentheses will be different on each occurrence, so I can't search for that.... (4 Replies)
HI Folks,
I'm looking for a solution for this issue.
I want to find the Pattern 0/ and replace it with /. I'm just removing the leading zero. I can find the Pattern but it always puts literal value as a replacement.
What am I missing??
sed -e s/0\//\//g File1 > File2
edit by... (3 Replies)
I have a sample text format as given below
<Text Text_ID="10155645315851111_10155645333076543" From="460350337461111" Created="2011-03-16T17:05:37+0000" use_count="123">This is the first text</Text>
<Text Text_ID="10155645315851111_10155645317023456" From="1626711840902323"... (3 Replies)
i have a file which contains data seperated by comma. i want to replace text after 3rd occurrence of a comma.
the input file looks like this
abcdef,11/02/2015 11:55:47,1001,1234567812345678,12364,,abc
abcdefg,11/02/2015 11:55:47,01,1234567812345678,123,,abc
abcdefhih,11/02/2015... (4 Replies)
hi unix expert
is there any command in linux to repace a pattern in the text to another pattern?
many thanks
samad (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: abdossamad2003
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
uniq
uniq(1) General Commands Manual uniq(1)Name
uniq - report repeated lines in a file
Syntax
uniq [-udc[+n][-n]] [input[output]]
Description
The command reads the input file comparing adjacent lines. In the normal case, the second and succeeding copies of repeated lines are
removed; the remainder is written on the output file. Note that repeated lines must be adjacent in order to be found. For further infor-
mation, see
Options
The n arguments specify skipping an initial portion of each line in the comparison:
-n Skips specified number of fields. A field is defined as a string of non-space, non-tab characters separated by tabs and spaces from its
neighbors.
+n Skips specified number of characters in addition to fields. Fields are skipped before characters.
-c Displays number of repetitions, if any, for each line.
-d Displays only lines that were repeated.
-u Displays only unique (nonrepeated) lines.
If the -u flag is used, just the lines that are not repeated in the original file are output. The -d option specifies that one copy of
just the repeated lines is to be written. The normal mode output is the union of the -u and -d mode outputs.
The -c option supersedes -u and -d and generates an output report in default style but with each line preceded by a count of the number of
times it occurred.
See Alsocomm(1), sort(1)uniq(1)