Hey is that it. My god you don't believe how much time I spent on this script. Thank you for still considering my long time boring queries and answering. Anyways coming to the point......
Quote:
Now, what should be in and what should be out of range? As far as the D record is concerned, we get "out of range" because the range min value in the input2 file (187984054) is greater than the min value (187982263) in the file input1.
But
The values starts from 187982263 to 187984662 (range) of input1 is overlapping with one of the range(bold letters) in input2 187984054 187984122 and 187984914 187984960 ........Therefor it should be "inexact".I mean "inrange"
If the input1 like this then its outnotexact 187982263 to 187984053 (range) of input1. The number in red bold letter increases even by 1 i.e 187984054 or 187984055.. its overlapping with input 2
input1
We need to name the ranges based on the above description. I'm afraid I think we already did like that isn't it?
Last edited by repinementer; 09-08-2009 at 10:30 AM..
i would like to enter (user input) a bunch of numbers seperated by space:
10 15 20 25
and use awk to print out any lines in a file that have matching numbers
so output is:
22 44 66 55 (10) 77 (20)
(numbers 10 and 20 matched for example)
is this possible in awk . im using gawk for... (5 Replies)
I am looking for a better way to match real numbers within a specified tolerance range. My current code is as follows:
if ($1 !~ /^CASE/) for(i=1;i in G;i++) if (G >= $5-1 && G <= $5+1)
{ print $1,$4,$5,J,G }
else { print $1,"NO MATCH" }
where $5 and G are... (3 Replies)
Hello to all,
I hope some awk guru could help me.
I have 2 input files:
File1: Is the complete database
File2: Contains some numbers which I want to compare
File1:
"NUMBERKEY","SERVICENAME","PARAMETERNAME","PARAMETERVALUE","ALTERNATENUMBERKEY"... (9 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am finding difficulty to get exact match:
file
OPERATING_SYSTEM=HP-UX
LOOPBACK_ADDRESS=127.0.0.1
INTERFACE_NAME="lan3"
IP_ADDRESS="10.53.52.241"
SUBNET_MASK="255.255.255.192"
BROADCAST_ADDRESS=""
INTERFACE_STATE=""
DHCP_ENABLE=0
INTERFACE_NAME="lan3:1"... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to match a filename that could be called anything from vout001 to vout252 and was trying to do a small test but I'm not getting the result I thought I would..
Can some one tell me what I'm doing wrong?
*****@********>echo $mynumber ... (4 Replies)
Input: START
OS:: UNIX
Release: xxx
Version: xxx
END
START
OS:: LINUX
Release: xxx
Version: xxx
END
START
OS:: Windows
Release: xxx
Version: xxx
ENDHere i am trying to get all the information between START and END, only if i could match OS Type.
I can get all the data between the... (3 Replies)
In the awk below I am trying to match the value in $4 of file1 with the split value from $4 in file2. I store the value of $4 in file1 in A and the split value (using the _ for the split) in array. I then strore the value in $2 as min, the value in $3 as max, and the value in $1 as chr.
If A is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
rlam
RLAM(1) General Commands Manual RLAM(1)NAME
rlam - laminate records from multiple files
SYNOPSIS
rlam [ -tS ][ -u ][ -iaN | -ifN | -idN | -iiN | -iwN | -ibN ] input1 input2 ..
DESCRIPTION
Rlam simply joins records (or lines) from multiple inputs, separating them with the given string (TAB by default). Different separators
may be given for different files by specifying additional -t options in between each file name. Note that there is no space between this
option and its argument. If none of the input files uses an ASCII separator, then no end-of-line character will be printed, either.
An input is either a stream or a command. Commands are given in quotes, and begin with an exclamantion point ('!'). If the inputs do not
have the same number of lines, then shorter files will stop contributing to the output as they run out.
The -ia option may be used to specify ASCII input (the default), or the -if option may be used to indicated binary IEEE 32-bit floats on
input. Similarly, the -id and -ii options may be used to indicate binary 64-bit doubles or integer words, respectively. The -iw option
specifies 2-byte short words, and the -ib option specifies bytes. If a number is immediately follows any of these options, then it indi-
cates that multiple such values are expected for each record. For example, -if3 indicates three floats per input record for the next named
input. In the case of the -ia option, no number indicates one line per input record, and numbers greater than zero indicate that many
characters exactly per record. For binary input formts, no number implies one value per record. For anything other than EOL-separated
input, the default tab separator is reset to the empty string.
A hyphen ('-') by itself can be used to indicate the standard input, and may appear multiple times. The -u option forces output after each
record (i.e., one run through inputs).
EXAMPLE
To join files output1 and output2, separated by a comma:
rlam -t, output1 output2
To join a file with line numbers (starting at 0) and its reverse:
cnt `wc -l < lam.c` | rlam - -t: lam.c -t '!tail -r lam.c'
To join four data files, each having three doubles per record:
rlam -id3 file1.dbl file2.dbl file3.dbl file4.dbl > combined.dbl
AUTHOR
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO cnt(1), histo(1), neaten(1), rcalc(1), tabfunc(1), total(1)RADIANCE 7/8/97 RLAM(1)