Using sed or awk, I need to display text between two words/characters. Below are two example inputs and the desired output. In a nutshell, I need the date-range value between the quotes (but only the first occurance of date-range as there can be more than one).
Example One Input:
xml-report... (1 Reply)
I have a requirement where i have to read from a .sh file a text lying bet characters like 'SELECT' & ';'...Please help me out in this. I am new to shell scripting. (2 Replies)
ok, so i have the following text to replace but it's not working. can someone please help me out:
:%s~awk '// {split($2,s,",");a=$1 FS s} /-/ {b=a} END{print b}'~tail -1~g
I want to replace the entire awk command with tail -1.
thanks (7 Replies)
I have a text file that looks like this:
I want to delete the last character of first column in all rows so that my output looks like this:
Thanks a lot! (1 Reply)
I have a file which looks like this. I only show first 11 lines of the file followed by some text that appears at the end of every file.
1. file:///path1/path2/path3/path4/251192.dat (score 3.849384, docid 142923)
2. file:///path1/path2/path3/path4/173859.dat (score 3.831033, docid 75365)
3.... (4 Replies)
I have a file where the text might exceed 80 characters. I want to have the maximum text lengths to be 80, and cut text from a space.
I written an awk script below but does not seem to work very well
{
gsub("\t"," ")
$0 = line $0
while (length <= WIDTH) {
line = $0
... (3 Replies)
When I use vi to see what's in the file I get this:
int add1(int x) {^M return x + 1;^M}
^Mint subtract1(int x) {^M return x - 1;^M}
^Mint double_it(int x) {^M return x * 2;^M}
^Mint halve_it(int x) {^Mreturn x / 2;^M}
^Mint main() {^M int myint;^M int result;^M ... (2 Replies)
Guys,
I know that the below command will cut the 13th field from test.txt file
awk -F"|" '{print $13}' test.txt
The answer would be,
CA
CN
Ohio
If we see the 3 rd one, it has more than 2 characters. So i wanted to check this in if condition and i want to get the output if the 13th... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a large text file with the following format:
>gi|347545744|gb|JN204951.1| Dismorphia spio voucher 5
ATCAAATTCCTTCCTCTCCTTAAA
>gi|17544664774|gb|WN204922.32| Rodapara nigens gene region
CCGGGCAAATTCCTTCCTCTCCTTAAA
>gi|555466400|gb|SG255122.8| Bombyx mandariana genbank 3... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a "|" delimited file that is exported from a database.
There is one column in the file which has description/comments entered by some application user. It has "Control-M" character and "New Line" character in between the text.
Hence, when i export the data, this record with the new... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tarun.trehan
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
explain
diction(1) General Commands Manual diction(1)NAME
diction, explain, suggest - Prints wordy sentences and looks them up in an interactive thesaurus.
SYNOPSIS
diction [-fpattern_file] [-k] [-ma] [-me] [-ml] [-ms] [-n] [file...]
explain
suggest
The diction command finds all sentences in an English language document that contain phrases from a database of bad or wordy diction. The
explain command is an interactive thesaurus for the English language phrases found by the diction command and only for those phrases.
The diction command reads from standard in if no file operand is provided.
The suggest command is a synonym for explain.
OPTIONS
Names a user-created pattern file to be used in addition to the default file. Passes the -k option to the deroff command. The -k option
keeps blocks of text specified nroff by requests or macros; for example, the request. Passes the -ma option to deroff. The -ma option
interprets nroff man macros only. Overrides the default nroff -ms macro package. Causes deroff to skip lists; should be used if a docu-
ment contains many lists of nonsentences. Overrides the default nroff -ms macro package. Suppresses use of the default file (used with
-f). Only the user-created pattern file is used.
DESCRIPTION
Each phrase found by the diction command is enclosed in [ ] (brackets). Because diction runs deroff before looking at the text, include
formatting header files as part of the input.
Before using the explain command, use the diction command to obtain a list of poorly worded phrases. When you use the explain command, the
system prompts you for a phrase and responds with a grammatically acceptable alternative. You can continue typing phrases, or you can exit
by pressing the End-of-File key sequence.
The explain command can also take input redirected from a file. No other command line arguments are valid.
NOTES
Use of nonstandard formatting macros may cause incorrect sentence breaks. In particular, diction does not understand -me.
FILES
Default pattern file. Thesaurus used by the explain command.
SEE ALSO
Commands: deroff(1), nroff(1)diction(1)