I tried to put the history line number and the date into the file with one command, and failed. Can't figure out how to get the date variable substituted for the last space captured.
Result was:
So, I sent the line number of my history to the file and the the date to the file, but I need to merge these 2 lines into one (so I can append my current history to my old history and remove duplicate lines while maintaining a date in the file for each day I login.
Resulted in:
for the last two lines of the file.
Can anyone help with either solution?
Thanks
Last edited by Scott; 02-18-2010 at 04:11 AM..
Reason: Please use code tags
Dear all,
I would like to combine all lines of a file with all lines of another file:
The input are
file 1
A
B
C
D
file 2
A
B
C
D
The output is
final file
A_A
A_B
A_C (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have an issue to combine multiple lines of a file. I have records as below.
Fields are delimited by TAB. Each lines are ending with a new line char (\n)
Input
--------
ABC 123456 abcde 987
890456 7890 xyz
ght gtuv
ABC 5tyin 1234 789
ghty kuio
ABC ghty jind 1234
678 ght
... (8 Replies)
Hello,
Input file looks like this:
apples
bananas
oranges and rice
pears
cherries
mango
I want output to look like this:
apples bananas
oranges and rice pears
cherries mango
It should combine line 1 with line 2 and line 3 with line 4 like that....
Right now, only way I can... (4 Replies)
I can't decide if I should use AWK or PERL after pouring over these forums for hours today I decided I'd post something and see if I couldn't get some advice.
I've got a text file full of hundreds of events in this format:
Record Number : 1
Records in Seq : ... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to understand if its possible to carry out the following.
I have a text file which contains output from multiple commands, within the file a node will be quiered twice if there was 2 commands for example. Is it possible do combine 2 lines into 1 if the first word is the... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a requirement where I need to combine two lines in a file based on first character of each line in a file.
Please find the sample content of the file below:
Code:
_______________________
5, jaya, male, 4-5-90, single
smart
6, prakash, male, 5-4-84, married
fair
7, raghavi,... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a requirement where I need to combine two lines in a file based on first character of each line in a file.
Please find the sample content of the file below:
Code:
_______________________
5, jaya, male, 4-5-90, single
smart
6, prakash, male, 5-4-84, married
fair
7, raghavi,... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a requirement where I need to combine two lines in a file based on first character of each line in a file.
Please find the sample content of the file below:
_______________________
5, jaya, male, 4-5-90, single
smart
6, prakash, male, 5-4-84, married
fair
7, raghavi, female,... (12 Replies)
I am trying to combine all matching lines in the tab-delimited using awk. The below runs but no output results. Thank you :).
input
chrX 110925349 110925532 ALG13
chrX 110925349 110925532 ALG13
chrX 110925349 110925532 ALG13
chrX 47433390 47433999 SYN1... (3 Replies)
Greetings,
I have large file with following format
name1 name2
name3 name4
name5 name6
child7 child8 child9 <== there is leading blank space
child10 child11 child12 <== there is leading blank space
name13 name14
name15 name16
child17 child18... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rnnyusa
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
combinediff
COMBINEDIFF(1)COMBINEDIFF(1)NAME
combinediff - create a cumulative unified patch from two incremental patches
SYNOPSIS
combinediff [-p n] [-U n] [-d PAT] [-Bbiqwz]
[--interpolate | --combine] diff1 diff2
combinediff {--help | --version}
DESCRIPTION
combinediff creates a unified diff that expresses the sum of two diffs. The diff files must be listed in the order that they are to be
applied. For best results, the diffs must have at least three lines of context.
The diffs may be in context format. The output, however, will be in unified format.
OPTIONS -p n When comparing filenames, ignore the first n pathname components from both patches. (This is similar to the -p option to GNU
patch(1).)
-q Quieter output. Don't emit rationale lines at the beginning of each patch.
-U n Attempt to display n lines of context (requires at least n lines of context in both input files). (This is similar to the -U option
to GNU diff(1).)
-d pattern
Don't display any context on files that match the shell wildcard pattern. This option can be given multiple times.
Note that the interpretation of the shell wildcard pattern does not count slash characters or periods as special (in other words, no
flags are given to fnmatch). This is so that ``*/basename''-type patterns can be given without limiting the number of pathname com-
ponents.
-i Consider upper- and lower-case to be the same.
-w Ignore whitespace changes in patches.
-b Ignore changes in the amount of whitespace.
-B Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
-z Decompress files with extensions .gz and .bz2.
--interpolate
Run as ``interdiff''. See combinediff(1) for more information about how the behaviour is altered in this mode.
--combine
Run as ``combinediff''. This is the default.
--help Display a short usage message.
--version
Display the version number of combinediff.
BUGS
The -U option is a bit erratic: it can control the amount of context displayed for files that are modified in both patches, but not for
files that only appear in one patch (which appear with the same amount of context in the output as in the input).
SEE ALSO interdiff(1)AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>.
patchutils 17 Apr 2002 COMBINEDIFF(1)