Hi,
I am stuck with a problem here.
Suppose i have a variable which is assigned some string containing special charatcers. for eg:
$a="abcdef^bbwk#kdbcd@";
I have to remove the special characters using Perl. The text is assigned to the variable implicitly.
How to do it? (1 Reply)
I need to add "new lines" of text with special characters, to specific lines in the file. There are 3 modifications needed. Been testing 2 here without success.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use FileHandle;
$file=FileHandle->new;
$FILENAME="/opt/etc/usr/file.txt";
$file->open ("<$FILENAME") or die... (13 Replies)
I finally figured out how to remove a file or directory with special characters in the name. It's kind of rudimentary so I thought I would share it with everyone:
find .inum -exec rm -rf {} \; (7 Replies)
Hello all
I am getting data like
col1 | col2 | col3
asdafa | asdfasfa | asf*&^sgê
345./ |sdfasd23425^%^&^ | sdfsa23
êsfsfd | sf(* | sdfsasf
My requirement is like
I have to to read the file and remove all special characters and hex characters ranging form 00-1f from 1st column, remove %"'... (1 Reply)
My application generate file but it have special characters in these file.
I would like to clear special characters by vi editor and not use cat /dev/null > to_file
I try to remove characters manually, but I'm can not!
root@MyHost /tmp> ls -l puzzle.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 root system ... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a "|" delimited file that is exported from a database.
There is one column in the file which has description/comments entered by some application user. It has "Control-M" character and "New Line" character in between the text.
Hence, when i export the data, this record with the new... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I need to create a test text file with the special characters \342\200\223 in it and to be able to use sed maybe to delete them
I tried doing it using vi by pressing CTRL-V and then typing 342 but it does not work. After pressing CTRL-V and typing 342 it seems to just insert the numbers... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
My requirement is to remove any invisible and special characters from the file like control M(carriage return) and alt numerics and it should not replace @#!$%
abc|xyz|acd¥£ó
adc|123| 12áí
Please help on this.
Thanks
Rakesh (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
My requirement is to remove any invisible and special characters from the file like control M(carriage return) and alt numerics and it should not replace @#!$%
abc|xyz|acd¥£ó
adc|123| 12áí
Please help on this.
Thanks
Rakesh (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rakeshp
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
paste
paste(1) General Commands Manual paste(1)Name
paste - merge file data
Syntax
paste file1 file2...
paste -dlist file1 file2...
paste -s [-dlist] file1 file2...
Description
In the first two forms, concatenates corresponding lines of the given input files file1, file2, etc. It treats each file as a column or
columns of a table and pastes them together horizontally (parallel merging).
In the last form, the command combines subsequent lines of the input file (serial merging).
In all cases, lines are glued together with the tab character, or with characters from an optionally specified list. Output is to the
standard output, so it can be used as the start of a pipe, or as a filter, if - is used in place of a file name.
Options
- Used in place of any file name, to read a line from the standard input. (There is no prompting).
-dlist Replaces characters of all but last file with nontabs characters (default tab). One or more characters immediately following -d
replace the default tab as the line concatenation character. The list is used circularly, i. e. when exhausted, it is reused. In
parallel merging (i. e. no -s option), the lines from the last file are always terminated with a new-line character, not from the
list. The list may contain the special escape sequences:
(new-line), (tab), \ (backslash), and (empty string, not a null
character). Quoting may be necessary, if characters have special meaning to the shell (for example, to get one backslash, use
-d"\\" ).
Without this option, the new-line characters of each but the last file (or last line in case of the -s option) are replaced by a
tab character. This option allows replacing the tab character by one or more alternate characters (see below).
-s Merges subsequent lines rather than one from each input file. Use tab for concatenation, unless a list is specified with -d
option. Regardless of the list, the very last character of the file is forced to be a new-line.
Examples
ls | paste -d" " -
list directory in one column
ls | paste - - - -
list directory in four columns
paste -s -d"
" file
combine pairs of lines into lines
Diagnostics
line too long
Output lines are restricted to 511 characters.
too many files
Except for -s option, no more than 12 input files may be specified.
See Alsocut(1), grep(1), pr(1)paste(1)