Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to extract a text portion from a file Post 302332456 by oky on Thursday 9th of July 2009 07:09:36 AM
Old 07-09-2009
If you are looking for the entire name searches in the file try

sed '/Name: /,/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
TRS(1)								Linux User's Manual							    TRS(1)

NAME
trs - filter replacing strings SYNOPSIS
trs [-[r]e] 'REPLACE_THIS WITH_THAT [AND_THIS WITH_THAT]...' trs [-[r]f] FILE DESCRIPTION
Copy stdin to stdout replacing every occurence of given strings with other ones. This is similar to tr(1), but replaces strings, not only single chars. Rules (separated by whitespace) can be given directly after -e option, or can be read from FILE. Argument not preceded by -e or -f is guessed to be a script when it contains some whitespace, or a filename otherwise. Comments are allowed from # until the end of line. The character # in strings must be specified as #. Standard C-like escapes a  e f v \ nn are recognized. In addition, s means a space character and ! means an empty string. Sets of acceptable characters at a given position can be specified between [ and ]. ASCII ranges in sets can be shortly written as FIRST-LAST. When a set consists of only a single range, [ and ] can be omitted. When a part of the string to translate is enclosed in {...}, only that part is replaced. Any text outside {...} serves as an assertion: a string is translated only if it is preceded by the given text and followed by another one. { at the beginning or } at the end of the string can be omitted. Text outside {...} is treated as untranslated. Before the beginning of the file and after its end there are only 's. Thus, for example, {.} matches . on a line by itself, including the first line, and the last one even without the marker. A fragment of the form ?x=N, where x is a letter A-Za-z and N is a digit 0-9, contained in the target text sets the variable x to the value N when that rule succeeds. Similar fragment in the source text causes the given rule to be considered only if that variable has such value. Initially all variables have the value of 0. Several assignments or conditions can be present in one rule - they are ANDed together. OPTIONS -e Give the translation rules directly in the command line. -f Get them from the file specified. -r Reverse every rule. This affects only the next -e or -f option. Of course this doesn't have to give the reverse translation! Any rule containing any of {}[]{}- is taken in only one direction. You may force any rule to be taken in only one direction by enclosing the string to translate in {...}. --help display help and exit --version output version information and exit Multiple -e or -f options are allowed. All rules are loaded together then, and earlier ones have precedence. EXAMPLE
$ echo Leeloo |trs -e 'el n e i i aqq o} x o u' Linux DIFFERENCES FROM sed The main difference between trs and sed 's///g; ...' (excluding sed's regular expressions) is that sed takes every rule in the order speci- fied and applies it to the whole line of translated file, whereas trs examines every position and tries all rules in this place first. In sed every next rule is fed with the text produced by the previous one, whereas in trs every piece of text can be translated at most once (if more than one rule matches at a given position, the one mentioned earlier wins). That's why sed isn't well suited for translating between character sets. On the other hand, tr translates only single bytes, so it can't be used for Unicode conversions, or TeX / SGML ways for specifying extended characters. Another example: $ echo 642 |trs -e '4 7 72 66 64 4' 42 $ echo 642 |sed 's/4/7/g; s/72/66/g; s/64/4/g' 666 The string to replace can be empty; there must be something outside {} then. In this special case only one such create-from-nothing rule can success at a given position. For example, }x80-xFF @ precedes every character with high byte set with @. The rule of the form some{ thing doesn't work at the end of a file. SEE ALSO
tr(1), konwert(1) COPYRIGHT
trs is a filter replacing strings. It forms part of the konwert package. Copyright (c) 1998 Marcin 'Qrczak' Kowalczyk This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MER- CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA AUTHOR
__("< Marcin Kowalczyk * qrczak@knm.org.pl http://qrczak.home.ml.org/ \__/ GCS/M d- s+:-- a21 C+++>+++$ UL++>++++$ P+++ L++>++++$ E->++ ^^ W++ N+++ o? K? w(---) O? M- V? PS-- PE++ Y? PGP->+ t QRCZAK 5? X- R tv-- b+>++ DI D- G+ e>++++ h! r--%>++ y- Konwert 12 Jul 1998 TRS(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:40 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy