I need to split a file into n separate files of about the same size. The way the file will be split is at every nth row, starting with the first row, that row will be cut and copied to it's corresponding new file so that each file has unique records. Any 'leftovers' will go into the last file. e.g.
'Run command' with n=4
Desired output:
# sample4.txt picked up the "leftovers".
Hi,
I want to write a shell script which increments a particular column in a row from a text file and then adds another row below the current row with the incremented value .
For Eg .
if the input file has a row :
abc xyz lmn 89 lm nk o p
I would like the script to create something like... (9 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I have a single column data like below.
1
2
3
4
5
I need the output like below.
0
1
2
3
4
where each row (including first row) subtracting from first row and the result should print below like the way shown in output file.
Thanks
Sid (11 Replies)
Issue: I am able to split source file in multiple files of 10 rows each but unable to get the required outputfile name. please advise.
Details:
input = A.txt having 44 rows
required output = A_001.txt , A_002.txt and so on. Can below awk be modified to give required result
current... (19 Replies)
I have a source file that contains multiple XML files concatenated in it. The separator string between files is <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>. I wanted to split files in multiple files with mentioned names. I had used a awk code earlier to spilt files in number of lines i.e.
awk... (10 Replies)
I have below script which does splitting based on a different criteria. can it be amended to produce required result
SrcFileName=XML_DUMP
awk '/<\?xml version="1\.0" encoding="utf-8"\?>/{n++}
n{f="'"${SrcFileName}_"'" sprintf("%04d",n) ".txt"
print >> f
close(f)}' $SrcFileName.txt
My... (3 Replies)
Hi. How can I read row number from one file and print that corresponding record present at that row in another file.
eg
file1
1
3
5
7
9
file2
11111
22222
33333
44444
55555
66666
77777
88888
99999 (3 Replies)
this is the requirement
list.txt
table1
table2
table3
testfile.txt
name#place#data#select * from table1
name2#place2#data2#select * from table 10 innerjoin table3
name2#place2#data2#select * from table 10
output
name place table1
name2 place table3
i tried using awk (7 Replies)
Using Awk, how can I achieve the following?
I have set of record numbers, for which, I have to replace the nth field with some values, say spaces.
Eg:
Set of Records : 4,9,10,55,89,etc
I have to change the 8th field of all the above set of records to spaces (10 spaces).
Its a delimited... (1 Reply)
Dear All,
We have input like this:
161 57 1378 176 1392 262 1444 441 1548 538 1611 670 1684
241 57 1378 208 1393 269 1447 444 1549 538 1610 677 1700
321 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: attila
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bntext
bntext(5) File Formats Manual bntext(5)NAME
bnmotd.txt, bnnews.txt bnissue.txt - messages for the Unix Battle.net daemon
DESCRIPTION
The file bnmotd.txt contains text displayed by bnetd(1), when users first log into the server.
The file bnnews.txt contains text displayed when the user uses the /news chat command.
The files consist of raw text with printf-style formatting escapes. Each line of a file can contain a type formatter from the following
list:
%B Use the broadcast attribute (???).
%C Execute the line as if the user entered it as a command.
%E Use the error attribute (red).
%I Use the info attribute (yellow). This is the same was %W.
%M Normal chat message (white). This will appear as if the user said it.
%T Emote chat message (???). This will appear as if the user said it.
%W Use the warning attribute (yellow). This is the same was %I.
Within a line, any of the following format formatters may be used:
%% Expand to a literal percent sign (%).
%a Expand to the number of accounts on the server.
%c Expand to the number of channels on the server. This includes all permanent and current temporary channels.
%g Expand to the number of games on the server. This includes both public and private (passworded) games.
%h Expand to the hostname of the server (as returned by gethostname(2)).
%i Expand to this user's account ID number, formatted with a leading pound (#) sign and leading zeros.
%l Expand to this user's current chat name which is usually the same
%r Expand to the IP of the remote machine (the client).
%t Expand to four character client tag.
%u Expand to the number of users logged into the server.
%v Expand to the version number of the server.
SEE ALSO bnetd(1)AUTHOR
Ross Combs (ross@bnetd.org)
2 August, 2001 bntext(5)