10-20-2009
There is no standard way. That will mainly depends on how you view the file.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
can anyone help to write data into a text file in bold format and rollback to actual format.
Thanks,
Regards,
Milton Y. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: miltony
1 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
Can someone tell me how to display characters in Bold in C shell?? (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: hemangi13
9 Replies
3. UNIX and Linux Applications
I sh,
I have bold characters in a file and I want to mail file to an ID.
$cat file
Incorrect or invalid external email IDs in TO and CC list for email_rules:
If I pass this file to mailx
$ cat file | mailx -s "hi" abc@xyz.com
What I get in mail is
(8 Replies)
Discussion started by: hemangi13
8 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
When I am running below mentioned script then the characters become bold but after opening the same file in Windows, Instead of getting bold characters i am getting some garbage value for \033Kunal Dixit
Output in Windows (after ftp the file):
but in windows , i am getting
My name is... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kunal_dixit
0 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
How to make the characters bold in k shell.
like for example
"File is too large to view" to "File is too large to view"
is it like echo "File is too large to view"
Please advice and samples (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajeshorpu
18 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi!
So i've got this shell script that asks questions and the user is required to input answers. The answers typed are bold.
sh-*.*$ sh filename dir
cat question
tput bold
read ans
tput sgr0
... and so on
tput sgr0
exit
So when the script ends i don't get the bold characters... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kingzy
3 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
hello, I'm trying to write the fastest sed command possible (large files will be processed) to replace RICH with NICK in a file which looks like this (below) if the occurance of RICH is uppercase, replace with uppercase if it's lowercase, replace with lowercase
SOMTHING_RICH_SOMTHING <- replace... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: rich@ardz
10 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
This is my first query here. I hope you could help.
I have a file as below
a 1 2 3 4
b 4 5 6
...
I need to print the first column of this in bold.
a 1 2 3 4
b 4 5 6
Is it possible, if so, could you please let me know how to do that?
I require this because I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: praveen.munna
3 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Ok, so let's say that I have a file like the following:
I want to create 100 replicates of this file, except that for each file, I want different randomized combinations of either A or B at the end of each line so that I would end up with files like the following:
and
etc.
I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Scatterbrain26
1 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi ,
Could you please guide me how to remove formatting (bold text) in a unix file?
vi editor showing like this...
^
Cat command showing like this...
tl21ss01
tl21ss02
tl21ss03 (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh3566
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
vwright
VWRIGHT(1) General Commands Manual VWRIGHT(1)
NAME
vwright - normalize a RADIANCE view, shift it to the right
SYNOPSIS
vwright [ view options ] distance
vwright [ view options ] name
DESCRIPTION
In the first form, vwright shifts a RADIANCE view the specified distance to the right, putting out a complete set of view parameters in a
single line on the standard output. This utility is most often used to compute a right-eyed view from a left-eye view for stereo imaging.
If no options are specified on the command line, vwright reads a view from its standard input.
The distance given is in world coordinate units. A negative value indicates a shift to the left rather than the right.
The second form substitutes a name prefix in place of the shift distance, and produces constant assignments on the standard output suitable
for passing directly to rcalc(1). For a given prefix N, the constant names are as follows:
Nt: view type ('v'==1,'l'==2,'a'==3,'h'==4,'c'==5,'s'==6)
Npx: view point x value
Npy: view point y value
Npz: view point z value
Ndx: view direction x value (normalized)
Ndy: view direction y value (normalized)
Ndz: view direction z value (normalized)
Nd: view focal distance
Nux: view up vector x value (normalized)
Nuy: view up vector y value (normalized)
Nuz: view up vector z value (normalized)
Nh: view horizontal size
Nv: view vertical size
Ns: view shift
Nl: view lift
No: view fore clipping distance
Na: view aft clipping distance
Nhx: derived horizontal image vector x value (normalized)
Nhy: derived horizontal image vector y value (normalized)
Nhz: derived horizontal image vector z value (normalized)
Nhn: derived horizontal image vector multiplier
Nvx: derived vertical image vector x value (normalized)
Nvy: derived vertical image vector y value (normalized)
Nvz: derived vertical image vector z value (normalized)
Nvn: derived vertical image vector multiplier
EXAMPLES
To start rpict(1) on a view .06 meters left of the view in the file "right.vf":
rpict `vwright -.06 < right.vf` scene.oct > right.hdr &
To move the rad(1) view named "left" 2.5 inches to the right and render from there:
rad -v "right `rad -n -s -V -v left examp.rif | vwright 2.5`" examp.rif &
To pass a view to rcalc for conversion to some other view:
rcalc -n -e `vwright orig < orig.vf` -f viewmod.cal -o view.fmt > new.vf
AUTHOR
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO
pdfblur(1), rad(1), rcalc(1), rpict(1), rvu(1)
RADIANCE
8/29/96 VWRIGHT(1)