Sponsored Content
Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions Displaying specific lines from a CSV file Post 302389967 by Adzi on Tuesday 26th of January 2010 01:42:38 PM
Old 01-26-2010
Question Displaying specific lines from a CSV file

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
Display from a csv file, birthdays that occur today. If there are no birthdays today, the next one in the year.


2. Relevant commands, code, scripts, algorithms:
The csv file is ordered from older to younger (ie. the most recent birth is at the bottom of the list).


3. The attempts at a solution (include all code and scripts):
I can pull todays birthdays out by the following;
Code:
date=`date +"%m"`/`date +"%d"`
cat birthdays.csv | grep $date

However I'm having trouble finding where to start to echo the next birthday if there isn't one today. The CSV file has to be ordered as stated above.

4. Complete Name of School (University), City (State), Country, Name of Professor, and Course Number (Link to Course):
Canterbury Christ Church University, Canterbury, UK, Paul Stephens, BSc Forensic Computing (Operating Systems 1)

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Cheers,
Adzi

Last edited by Adzi; 01-26-2010 at 02:45 PM.. Reason: Adding additional course info.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Displaying specific lines in a file.

I'm trying to figure out how to display a certain line in a text file. I keep getting references to Tail and Head, and I know how these work, but i'm lost on how to find say the third out of the five lines and display only that. I thought maybe grep could help, but that doesn't seem likely. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MaestroRage
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displaying the Last Modification Time of a specific file

How can I get and display the last modification time of a file? in scripting or specifically using Batch file I want this info for me to determine whether an image has been edited or not by using the last modification time and compare it to our stored date of modification. can somebody help... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jaque18
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to display specific lines of a specific file

are there any basic commands that can display lines 99 - 101 of the /etc/passwd file? I'm thinking use of head and tail, but I forget what numbers to use and where to put /etc/passwd in the command. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: raidkridley
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displaying number of lines from file

Hi, I am using below command to display the number of line, but its returning no of lines along with file name. But i want only no of line in the variable p. Please help me on this? p=`wc -l "text file"` echo "$p" (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: shivanete
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Displaying specific columns in a file

Hi, I'm just wondering how you display a specific set of columns of a specified file in Unix. For example, if you had an AddressBook file that stores the Names, Phone numbers, and Addresses of people the user entered in the following format (the numbers are just to give an idea of what column... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: logorob
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displaying lines of a file where the second field matches a pattern

Howdy. I know this is most likely possible using sed or awk or grep, most likely a combination of them together, but how would one go about running a grep like command on a file where you only try to match your pattern to the second field in a line, space delimited? Example: You are... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: LordJezoX
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displaying lines of a file which have the highest number?

Hello Wondering if anybody may be able to advise on how I can filter the contents of the following file: <object_name>-<version> <Instance> GM_GUI_code.fmb-4 1 GM_GUI_code.fmb-5 1 GM_GUI_code.fmx-4 ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Glyn_Mo
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

insert data into specific lines of a CSV

So I work in a 1 to 1 laptop deployment and sometimes we need to mass order parts. The vendor will send us a text file and we have to manually input serial numbers. Well I have a full blown web based inventory system which I can pull serial number reports from. I then have to input the part... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tlarkin
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Quick UNIX command to display specific lines in the middle of a file from/to specific word

This could be a really dummy question. I have a log text file. What unix command to extract line from specific string to another specific string. Is it something similar to?: more +/"string" file_name Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: aku
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Convert a horizontal lines to vertical lines in a csv file

Hi.. I need some help in converting the below horizontal lines to vertical lines format. can anyone help me on this. input file Hour,1,2,3,4,5 90RT,106,111,111,112,111 output file Hour,90RT 1,106 2,111 3,111 4,112 5,111 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Raghuram717
3 Replies
CSV(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						  CSV(3pm)

NAME
Class::CSV - Class based CSV parser/writer SYNOPSIS
use Class::CSV; my $csv = Class::CSV->parse( filename => 'test.csv', fields => [qw/item qty sub_total/] ); foreach my $line (@{$csv->lines()}) { $line->sub_total('$'. sprintf("%0.2f", $line->sub_total())); print 'Item: '. $line->item(). " ". 'Qty: '. $line->qty(). " ". 'SubTotal: '. $line->sub_total(). " "; } my $cvs_as_string = $csv->string(); $csv->print(); my $csv = Class::CSV->new( fields => [qw/userid username/], line_separator => " "; ); $csv->add_line([2063, 'testuser']); $csv->add_line({ userid => 2064, username => 'testuser2' }); DESCRIPTION
This module can be used to create objects from CSV files, or to create CSV files from objects. Text::CSV_XS is used for parsing and creating CSV file lines, so any limitations in Text::CSV_XS will of course be inherant in this module. EXPORT None by default. METHOD
CONSTRUCTOR parse the parse constructor takes a hash as its paramater, the various options that can be in this hash are detailed below. Required Options o fields - an array ref containing the list of field names to use for each row. there are some reserved words that cannot be used as field names, there is no checking done for this at the moment but it is something to be aware of. the reserved field names are as follows: "string", "set", "get". also field names cannot contain whitespace or any characters that would not be allowed in a method name. Source Options (only one of these is needed) o filename - the path of the CSV file to be opened and parsed. o filehandle - the file handle of the CSV file to be parsed. o objects - an array ref of objects (e.g. Class::DBI objects). for this to work properly the field names provided in fields needs to correspond to the field names of the objects in the array ref. o classdbi_objects - depreciated use objects instead - using classdbi_objects will still work but its advisable to update your code. Optional Options o line_separator - the line seperator to be included at the end of every line. defaulting to " " (unix carriage return). new the new constructor takes a hash as its paramater, the same options detailed in parse apply to new however no Source Options can be used. this constructor creates a blank CSV object of which lines can be added via add_line. ACCESSING lines returns an array ref containing objects of each CSV line (made via Class::Accessor). the field names given upon construction are available as accessors and can be set or get. for more information please see the notes below or the perldoc for Class::Accessor. the lines accessor is also able to be updated/retrieved in the same way as individual lines fields (examples below). Example retrieving the lines: my @lines = @{$csv->lines()}; removing the first line: pop @lines; $csv->lines(@lines); sorting the lines: @lines = sort { $a->userid() <=> $b->userid() } @lines: $csv->lines(@lines); sorting the lines (all-in-one way): $csv->lines([ sort { $a->userid() <=> $b->userid() } @{$csv->lines()} ]); Retrieving a fields value there is two ways to retrieve a fields value (as documented in Class::Accessor). firstly you can call the field name on the object and secondly you can call "get" on the object with the field name as the argument (multiple field names can be specified to retrieve an array of values). examples are below. my $value = $line->test(); OR my $value = $line->get('test'); OR my @values = $line->get(qw/test test2 test3/); Setting a fields value setting a fields value is simmilar to getting a fields value. there are two ways to set a fields value (as documented in Class::Accessor). firstly you can simply call the field name on the object with the value as the argument or secondly you can call "set" on the object with a hash of fields and their values to set (this isn't standard in Class::Accessor, i have overloaded the "set" method to allow this). examples are below. $line->test('123'); OR $line->set( test => '123' ); OR $line->set( test => '123', test2 => '456' ); Retrieving a line as a string to retrieve a line as a string simply call "string" on the object. my $string = $line->string(); new_line returns a new line object, this can be useful for to "splice" a line into lines (see example below). you can pass the values of the line as an ARRAY ref or a HASH ref. Example my $line = $csv->new_line({ userid => 123, domainname => 'splicey.com' }); my @lines = $csv->lines(); splice(@lines, 1, 0, $line); OR splice(@{$csv->lines()}, 1, 0, $csv->new_line({ userid => 123, domainname => 'splicey.com' })); add_line adds a line to the lines stack. this is mainly useful when the new constructor is used but can of course be used with any constructor. it will add a new line to the end of the lines stack. you can pass the values of the line as an ARRAY ref or a HASH ref. examples of how to use this are below. Example $csv->add_line(['house', 100000, 4]); $csv->add_line({ item => 'house', cost => 100000, bedrooms => 4 }); OUTPUT string returns the object as a string (CSV file format). print calls "print" on string (prints the CSV to STDOUT). SEE ALSO
Text::CSV_XS, Class::Accessor AUTHOR
David Radunz, <david@boxen.net> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2004 by David Radunz This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.0 2007-02-08 CSV(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:19 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy