Awk fails to run if the NF > 99. gawk can be used in place, but my shell is not having that command. So I thought to do it with perl logic.
But in the given code, it retrieves all the rows with more than 150 delimiters. My intentition is to filter all the records those not having 150 delimiters.
Therefore, code has to filter recors not only with 151 limiters but also with 149 delimiters.
If I am not clear, please let me know.
Quote:
Originally Posted by danmero
Code:
awk -F'|' 'NF != 152' in_file > reject_file
For 150 Field Separator(delimiter) you will have 152 fields.
Hi,
is it possible to write files via write() to a socket and read it on the other side via read(), without going through buffers? Iif not via write() and read() are there other possibilities?
thanks
darkspace (5 Replies)
Hello all
I wander of there is small utility that gives me the possibility to download direct links to specific folder
say if i have http://www.blah.com/foo.java and I like to download the foo.java without opening the browser and such... (2 Replies)
For example:
File 1:
abc def ghi
jkl mno pqr
File 2:
stu vwx yza
bcd efg hij
klm nop qrs
I want the reult to be:
abc def ghistu vwx yza
jkl mno pqrbcd efg hij
klm nop qrs (4 Replies)
Hello UNIX experts,
I have 124 text files in a directory. I want to extract the 45678th line of all the files sequentialy by file names. The extracted lines should be printed in the output file on seperate lines.
e.g. The input Files are one.txt, two.txt, three.txt, four.txt
The cat of four... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have three separate text files which has only one line and i want to combine these lines in one text file which will have three lines.
cat file1.txt
abc
cat file2.txt
1265 6589 1367
cat file3.txt
0.98 0.36 0.5
So, I want to see these three lines in the... (9 Replies)
I have two files:
file-gene_families.txt that contains 30,000 rows of 30 columns. Column 1 is the ID column and contains the
Col1 Col2 Col3 ...
One gene-encoded CBPs ABC 111 ...
One gene-encoded CBPs ABC 222 ...
One gene-encoded CBPs ABC 212 ...
Two gene encoded CBPs EFC... (7 Replies)
Hi guys,
been scratching round the forums and my mountain of resources.
Maybe I havn't read deep enough
My question is not how sed edits a stream and outputs it to a file, rather something like this below:
I have a .txt with some text in it :rolleyes:
abc:123:xyz
123:abc:987... (7 Replies)
Hello all,
i have a code in which when doing a for loop, i need to direct the output to two files, one just a single output, the other to always append (historical reasons).
So far i managed to do the following, which is working, but am still considering it as "dirty".
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
A beginner one.
my input.tab (tab-separated):
h1 h2 h3 h4 h5
item1 grpA 2 3 customer1
item2 grpB 4 6 customer1
item3 grpA 5 9 customer1
item4 grpA 0 0 customer2
item5 grpA 9 1 customer2
objective:
output a file for each customer ($5) with the item number ($1) only if $2 matches... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: beca123456
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
cut
CUT(1) General Commands Manual CUT(1)NAME
cut - select out columns of a file
SYNOPSIS
cut [ -b | -c] list [file...]
cut -f list [-d delim] [ -s]
OPTIONS -b Cut specified bytes
-c Select out specific characters
-d Change the column delimiter to delim
-f Select out specific fields that are separated by the
-i Runs of delimiters count as one
-s Suppres lines with no delimiter characters, when used
EXAMPLES
cut -f 2 file # Extract field 2
cut -c 1-2,5 file # Extract character columns 1, 2, and 5
cut -c 1-5,7- file # Extract all columns except 6
DESCRIPTION
[file...]" delimiter character ( see delim)" with the -f option. Lines with no delimiters are passwd through untouched"
Cut extracts one or more fields or columns from a file and writes them on standard output. If the -f flag is used, the fields are sepa-
rated by a delimiter character, normally a tab, but can be changed using the -d flag. If the -c flag is used, specific columns can be
specified. The list can be comma or BLANK separated. The -f and -c flags are mutually exclusive. Note: The POSIX1003.2 standard requires
the option -b to cut out specific bytes in a file. It is intended for systems with multi byte characters (e.g. kanji), since MINIX uses
only one byte characters, this option is equivalent to -c. For the same reason, the option -n has no effect and is not listed in this man-
ual page.
SEE ALSO sed(1), awk(9).
CUT(1)