Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: calculations in bash
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting calculations in bash Post 302337783 by jim mcnamara on Saturday 25th of July 2009 06:58:20 AM
Old 07-25-2009
Are you using the split command?
Code:
cat filename | wc -l  | read linecount

maxpgcnt=680 
l=$(( $linecount % $maxpgcnt ))
while [[ $l -gt 0  && $l -lt $(( $maxpgcnt - 20 )) ]]
do
       maxpgcnt=$(( $maxpgcnt + 1 )) 
       l=$(( $linecount % $maxpgcnt ))
done

split -l $l filename

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Non-integer calculations in bash

I'm new at scripting but I thought I was getting pretty good at it. I've hit a snag. I try to use expr to compute a fraction say: expr 3 / 4, and I'm getting zero. I guess it's just truncating to the integer, in this case 0, but I need the decimal 0.75. What can I do to compute this value in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeriryan87
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Time Calculations

I'm trying to have a loop print out statistics every X number of seconds. How can I add a specific number of seconds to a time variable and make a comparison? Thanks ahead of time. For example: startTime = `date +%H%M%S` currentTime = $startTime executeTime = startTime + X # X is equal... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nysif Steve
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

ksh, calculations using bc

hi all, was wondering if there is another way to do calculations in ksh scripts other than using bc ?? i am using a script to calculate average response time and my script errors out after running for a bit. e.g code i am using : averageTime=$(print "$totalTime / $numberOfEntries" |... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cesarNZ
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

any way to speed up calculations in bash script

hi i have a script that is taking the difference of multiple columns in a file from a value from a single row..so far i have a loop to do that.. all the data is floating point..fin has the difference between array1 and array2..array1 has 700 x 300= 210000 values and array2 has 700 values.. ... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: npatwardhan
11 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Date Calculations

I need to be able to use the current date and calculate 7 days ago to be stored in another variable to be passed to a file in my Unix shell script. I need the date in the following format: date '+%m/%d/%Y' or 05/16/2006 How do I calculate date minus 7 days or 1 week ago? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mitschcg
8 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

bash script range calculations

Hi, I have data in the following form: AB001 10 AB002 9 AB003 9 etc AB200 5 What I need to do is sum up the second value according to groups of the first, i.e. AB001 to AB030 the total being X, AB031 to AB050 the total being Y etc (there are 5 AB ranges of different sizes). I'm sure... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: chrissycc
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Doing calculations with bc on one field

Hello, I have to turn: Apple Inc.:325,64:329,57 into Apple Inc.:325,64:329,57:3,93 3,93=329,57-325,64. My code: cat beurs.txt | sed 's/\(*\):\(*\),*\(*\):\(*\),\(*\)/\4\.\5-\2\.\3/' beurs.txt | bc| tr '.' ',' | sed 's/^-*,/0,/' > winstmarges.txt; paste -d: beurs.txt winstmarges.txt; rm... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ikke008
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Problem with calculations

grep Quality abc.txt | awk -F"=" '{print $2}' o/p is given as 70/70 49/70 I want in the below format (percentage format) 100% 70% help me!!!!:confused::confused::confused: ---------- Post updated at 09:59 AM ---------- Previous update was at 09:57 AM ---------- Cell 01 -... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikhil jain
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Arithmetic calculations in bash file

I have 2 numbers xmin = 0.369000018 xmax = 0.569000006 and want to calculate (xmax- xmin) / 5.0 I have tried using $(( )) but is always giving an error (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
8 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Loop doing calculations

Hello. I'm writing an awk script that looks at a .csv file and calculates the weighted grade for each student based on the scores and categories in the file. I am able to get the script to run the only issue however is that the same score for each student is the same. I'm self-teaching myself the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Eric7giants
1 Replies
PLOTCHANGELOG(1)					      General Commands Manual						  PLOTCHANGELOG(1)

NAME
plotchangelog - graph debian changelogs SYNOPSIS
plotchangelog [options] changelog ... DESCRIPTION
plotchangelog is a tool to aid in visualizing a Debian changelog. The changelogs are graphed with gnuplot(1) , with the X axis of the graph denoting time of release and the Y axis denoting the debian version number of the package. Each individual release of the package is repre- sented by a point, and the points are color coded to indicate who released that version of the package. The upstream version number of the package can also be labeled on the graph. Alternatively, the Y axis can be configured to display the size of the changelog entry for each new version. Or it can be configured to display approximately how many bugs were fixed for each new version. Note that if the package is a debian-specific package, the entire package version will be used for the Y axis. This does not always work perfectly. READING THE GRAPH
The general outline of a package's graph is typically a series of peaks, starting at 1, going up to n, and then returning abruptly to 1. The higher the peaks, the more releases the maintainer made between new upstream versions of the package. If a package is debian-only, it's graph will just grow upwards without ever falling (although a bug in this program may cause it to fall sometimes, if the version number goes from say, 0.9 to say, 0.10 - this is interpreted wrong..) If the graph dips below 1, someone made a NMU of the package and upgraded it to a new upstream version, thus setting the debian version to 0. NMU's in general appear as fractional points like 1.1, 2.1, etc. A NMU can also be easily detected by looking at the points that repre- sent which maintainer uploaded the package -- a solitary point of a different type than the points before and after it is typically a NMU. It's also easy to tell by looking at the points when a package changes maintainers. OPTIONS
-l, --linecount Instead of using the debian version number as the Y axis, use the number of lines in the changelog entry for each version. Cannot be used together with --bugcount. -b, --bugcount Instead of using the debian version number as the Y axis, use the number of bugs that were closed by each changelog entry. Note that this number is obtained by searching for "#dddd" in the changelog, and so it may be inaccurate. Cannot be used together with --linecount. -c, --cumulative When used together with either --bugcount or --linecount, graphs the cumulative count rather than the count in each individual changelog entry. -v, --no-version Do not show upstream version labels. Useful if the graph gets too crowded. -m, --no-maint Do not differentiate between different maintainers of the package. -s file, --save=file Save the graph to file in postscript format instead of immediately displaying it. -u, --urgency Use larger points when displaying higher-urgency package uploads. --verbose Output the gnuplot script that is fed into gnuplot (for debugging purposes). -gcommands, --gnuplot=commands This allows you to insert gnuplot(1) commands into the gnuplot script that is used to generate the graph. The commands are placed after all initialization but before the final plot command. This can be used to override the default look provided by this program in arbitrary ways. You can also use things like "set terminal png color" to change the output file type, which is useful in conjunc- tion with the -s option. --help Show a usage summary. --version Display version, author and copyright information. --noconf, --no-conf Do not read any configuration files (see below). changelog ... The changelog files to graph. If multiple files are specified they will all be display on the same graph. The files may be com- pressed with gzip. Any text in them that is not in Debian changelog format will be ignored. CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
The two configuration files /etc/devscripts.conf and ~/.devscripts are sourced by a shell in that order to set configuration variables. The --no-conf option can be used to prevent reading these files. Environment variable settings are ignored when these configuration files are read. The currently recognised variables are: PLOTCHANGELOG_OPTIONS This is a space-separated list of options to always use, for example -l -b. Do not include -g or --gnuplot among this list as it may be ignored; see the next variable instead. PLOTCHANGELOG_GNUPLOT These are gnuplot commands which will be prepended to any such commands given on the command line. SEE ALSO
devscripts.conf(5). AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net> DEBIAN
Debian Utilities PLOTCHANGELOG(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:36 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy