Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to extract a text portion from a file Post 302332443 by dennis.jacob on Thursday 9th of July 2009 06:34:44 AM
Old 07-09-2009
try:

Code:
sed '/Name: xyz/,/end of text/!d' filename

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Separate a portion of text file into another file

Hi, I have my input as follows : I have given two entries- From system Mon Aug 1 23:52:47 2005 Source !100000006!: Impact !100000005!: High Status ! 7!: New Last Name+!100000001!: First Name+ !100000003!: ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: srikanth_ksv
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

extract a portion of log file

hello, I want to grep the log file according to time and get the portion of log from one particular time to other. I can grep for individual lines by time but how should I print lines continuously from given start time till end till given end time. Appreciate your ideas, Thanks chandra (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: chandra004
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

extract date portion from file

Hi, I have a file where there is a date field (single line variable length file) how to extract just the date portion from it the position of date field may vary anywhere in the line but will always have the format mm-dd-yyyy for eg . xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx09-10-2006xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: misenkiser
5 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to extract a portion of text from a log file

I am using Unix on Mac OS X 10.5.6. I am trying to extract the last entry of a log (text) file. As seen below, each log entry looks like the following (date and time change with each log entry): I want the script to extract everything quoted above, including the "===" dividers. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: atilano
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

extract string portion using sed

Hi All I have 3 files as listed below and highlighted in bold the portions of the filenames I need to extract: TOS_TABIN218_20090323.200903231830 TOS_TABIN219_1_20090323.200903231830 TOS_TABIN219_2_20090323.200903231830 I tried source_tabin_name=`echo $fname | sed 's/_.*//'` but I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: santam
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting a portion of data from a very large tab delimited text file

Hi All I wanted to know how to effectively delete some columns in a large tab delimited file. I have a file that contains 5 columns and almost 100,000 rows 3456 f g t t 3456 g h 456 f h 4567 f g h z 345 f g 567 h j k lThis is a very large data file and tab delimited. I need... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

parsing a portion of Data from a text file

Hi All, I need some help to effectively parse out a subset of results from a big results file. Below is an example of the text file. Each block that I need to parse starts with "Output of GENE for sequence file 100.fasta" (next block starts with another number). I have given the portion of... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
8 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to extract portion of a string?

Hi Gurus, Would like to seek some help on how to extract a portion of string from log's output as shown below. Sample of raw data: piece handle=/test123/disk_dump/test123/df0_cntrl_PCPFCI20120404_68498 tag=TAG20120404T180035 comment=NONE piece... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: superHonda123
13 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extract portion of data

Hi Gurus, I need some help in extracting some of these information and massage it into the desired output as shown below. I need to extract the last row with the header in below sample which is usually the most recent date, for example: 2012-06-01 142356 mb 519 -219406 mb 1 ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: superHonda123
9 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Extract a portion of string from each line in Linux

Hi I have to extract the destination path information from each record the file is of variable length so I will not be able to use the print command.The search should start on variable "destinationPath" and it should end at immediate "," also the first field has to be printed Input File:... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: rkakitapalli
7 Replies
strextract(1int)														  strextract(1int)

Name
       strextract - batch string extraction

Syntax
       strextract [ -p patternfile ] [ -i ignorefile ] [ -d ] [ source-program...  ]

Description
       The  command extracts text strings from source programs.  This command also writes the string it extracts to a message text file.  The mes-
       sage text file contains the text for each message extracted from your input source program. The command names the file by appending .msg to
       the name of the input source program.

       In  the	source-program argument, you name one or more source programs from which you want messages extracted. The command does not extract
       messages from source programs included using the directive. Therefore, you might want a source program  and  all  the  source  programs	it
       includes on a single command line.

       You  can  create a patterns file (as specified by patternfile ) to control how the command extracts text. The patterns file is divided into
       several sections, each of which is identified by a keyword. The keyword must start at the beginning of a new line, and its first  character
       must  be  a dollar sign ($).  Following the identifier, you specify a number of patterns. Each pattern begins on a new line and follows the
       regular expression syntax you use in the routine. For more information on the patterns file, see the(5int) reference page.

       In addition to the patterns file, you can create a file that indicates strings that ignores.  Each line in this ignore file contains a sin-
       gle string to be ignored that follows the syntax of the routine.

       When you invoke the command, it reads the patterns file and the file that contains strings it ignores.  You can specify a patterns file and
       an ignore file on the command line.  Otherwise, the command matches all strings and uses the default patterns file.

       If finds strings which match the directive in the pattern file, it reports the strings to standard error (stderr.) but does not	write  the
       string to the message file.

       After running you can edit the message text file to remove text strings which do not need translating before running

       It is  recommended that you use command	as a visual front end to the command rather than running directly.

Options
       -i   Ignore  text  strings specified in ignorefile.  By default, the command searches for ignorefile in the current working directory, your
	    home directory, and

	    If you omit the option, recognizes all strings specified in the patterns file.

       -p   Use patternfile to match strings in the input source program. By default, the command searches for the pattern  file  in  the  current
	    working directory, your home directory, and finally

	    If you omit the option, the command uses a default patterns file that is stored in

       -d   Disables warnings of duplicate strings. If you omit the option, prints warnings of duplicate strings in your source program.

Restrictions
       Given the default pattern file, you cannot cause to ignore strings in comments that are longer than one line.

       You can specify only one rewrite string for all classes of pattern matches.

       The command does not extract strings from files include with directive. You must run the commands on these files separately.
       % strextract -p c_patterns prog.c prog2.c
       % vi prog.msg
       % strmerge -p c_patterns prog.c prog2.c
       % gencat prog.cat prog.msf prog2.msf
       % vi nl_prog.c
       % vi nl_prog2.c
       % cc nl_prog.c nl_prog2.c -li

       In this example, the command uses the file to determine which strings to match. The input source programs are named and

       If  you	need  to  remove  any  of the messages or extract one of the created strings, edit the resulting message file, Under no conditions
       should you add to this file. Doing so could result in unpredictable behavior.

       You issue the command to replace the extracted strings with calls to the message catalog.  In response to this command, creates the  source
       message catalogs, and and the output source programs, and

       You must edit and to include the appropriate and function calls.

       The command creates a message catalog and the command creates an executable program.

See Also
       intro(3int), gencat(1int), extract(1int), strmerge(1int), regex(3), catopen(3int), patterns(5int)
       Guide to Developing International Software

																  strextract(1int)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:13 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy