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Operating Systems AIX Pattern to replace ^M and ^Y in a 4.2 AIX text file Post 302316887 by bakunin on Sunday 17th of May 2009 05:44:31 AM
Old 05-17-2009
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:

Code:
sed -n 'N;N;s/[^M^Y]//g;s/\n//gp;N;N

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.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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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 Also
       comm(1), sort(1)

																	   uniq(1)
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