If at all possible, I'd like to do this within an awk script, although I don't object to a system call in a pinch. Also, when I run your solution, I get:
instead of:
Do you get the same on your system, or does it work there?
FWIW, the most promising (but still failed...) solution I can think of is to put a trailing comma on $0, and then apply up to 5 times something like:
gsub("0,",",",$0)
Unfortunately, that only works if there's a way to apply it only to those fields which contain a decimal point. The fact that this is a gsub applying to $0 makes that difficult, and the solution as written would turn, for example, 1200 into 120, then into 12 on a second application.
We have a large number of oracle database related scripts that utilize the environment variables $ORACLE_SID and $DBNAME. In a single instance database the $ORACLE_SID is the same as the database name $DBNAME. So we have simply set DBNAME = $ORACLE_SID. However, now that we are clustering with RAC,... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a file with the following contents with multiple lines
172445957| 000005911|8| 400 Peninsula Ave.#1551 | And,K |935172445957|000005911
607573888 |000098536 | 2|Ane, B |J |Ane |1868 |19861206|20090106|20071001
I want to trim the "leading and trailing spaces only" from... (2 Replies)
I have th following file
0000000011
0000000001
0000000231
0000000001
0000000022
noow when i run the following command
sed 's/^0+//g' file name
I receive the same output and the leading zeroes are not removed from the file . Please let me know how to achieve... (4 Replies)
Hello All,
I have a csv file with 3 columns. The file which looks like this
47850000,100,233
23560000,10000,456
78650000,560000,54
34000000,3456,3
The first column has 4 trailing zeros. I have to remove 4 trailing zeroes from 1st field. The output file should appear as follows.
... (12 Replies)
Hi
I have 3 files (say) in a folder as in the example below
abc_01012011.csv
def_01012011.csv
xyz_01012011.csv
I need to move these files to a different folder as follows
abc.csv
def.csv
xyz.csv
I am trying to put together a script with a for loop which reads the source filenames... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I haven't needed to do any shell based editing for nearly 20 years, and no amount of searching around has found me a solution to this very simple problem :-(
I have a csv file.
Some lines have three commas at the end. This means the invoice hasn't been paid.
I'd like to use sed / grep... (4 Replies)
I have been given a shell script that I need to amend. To do the following
extract the filename from the flag file by removing the .flag extension.
# Local variables
# Find if the flag files exists
MASK=coda_mil2*.flag
# Are there any files?
bookmark="40"
fileFound=0
ls -1... (3 Replies)
I have been trying to remove empty lines and lines just filled with spaces. I have used the following command which does work.
sed -i "/^\s*$/d"
Except it leaves one single trailing line at the very end of the file. For the life of me I cant figure out why I cant remove that last trailing... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: user8282892
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
ascii
ascii(5) Standards, Environments, and Macros ascii(5)NAME
ascii - map of ASCII character set
SYNOPSIS
cat /usr/pub/ascii
DESCRIPTION
/usr/pub/ascii is a map of the ASCII character set, to be printed as needed. It contains octal and hexadecimal values for each character.
While not included in that file, a chart of decimal values is also shown here.
Octal - Character
000 NUL 001 SOH 002 STX 003 ETX 004 EOT 005 ENQ 006 ACK 007 BEL
010 BS 011 HT 012 NL 013 VT 014 NP 015 CR 016 SO 017 SI
020 DLE 021 DC1 022 DC2 023 DC3 024 DC4 025 NAK 026 SYN 027 ETB
030 CAN 031 EM 032 SUB 033 ESC 034 FS 035 GS 036 RS 037 US
040 SP 041 ! 042 " 043 # 044 $ 045 % 046 & 047 '
050 ( 051 ) 052 * 053 + 054 , 055 - 056 . 057 /
060 0 061 1 062 2 063 3 064 4 065 5 066 6 067 7
070 8 071 9 072 : 073 ; 074 < 075 = 076 > 077 ?
100 @ 101 A 102 B 103 C 104 D 105 E 106 F 107 G
110 H 111 I 112 J 113 K 114 L 115 M 116 N 117 O
120 P 121 Q 122 R 123 S 124 T 125 U 126 V 127 W
130 X 131 Y 132 Z 133 [ 134 135 ] 136 ^ 137 _
140 ` 141 a 142 b 143 c 144 d 145 e 146 f 147 g
150 h 151 i 152 j 153 k 154 l 155 m 156 n 157 o
160 p 161 q 162 r 163 s 164 t 165 u 166 v 167 w
170 x 171 y 172 z 173 { 174 | 175 } 176 ~ 177 DEL
Hexadecimal - Character
00 NUL 01 SOH 02 STX 03 ETX 04 EOT 05 ENQ 06 ACK 07 BEL
08 BS 09 HT 0A NL 0B VT 0C NP 0D CR 0E SO 0F SI
10 DLE 11 DC1 12 DC2 13 DC3 14 DC4 15 NAK 16 SYN 17 ETB
18 CAN 19 EM 1A SUB 1B ESC 1C FS 1D GS 1E RS 1F US
20 SP 21 ! 22 " 23 # 24 $ 25 % 26 & 27 '
28 ( 29 ) 2A * 2B + 2C , 2D - 2E . 2F /
30 0 31 1 32 2 33 3 34 4 35 5 36 6 37 7
38 8 39 9 3A : 3B ; 3C < 3D = 3E > 3F ?
40 @ 41 A 42 B 43 C 44 D 45 E 46 F 47 G
48 H 49 I 4A J 4B K 4C L 4D M 4E N 4F O
50 P 51 Q 52 R 53 S 54 T 55 U 56 V 57 W
58 X 59 Y 5A Z 5B [ 5C 5D ] 5E ^ 5F _
60 ` 61 a 62 b 63 c 64 d 65 e 66 f 67 g
68 h 69 i 6A j 6B k 6C l 6D m 6E n 6F o
70 p 71 q 72 r 73 s 74 t 75 u 76 v 77 w
78 x 79 y 7A z 7B { 7C | 7D } 7E ~ 7F DEL
Decimal - Character
0 NUL 1 SOH 2 STX 3 ETX 4 EOT 5 ENQ 6 ACK 7 BEL
8 BS 9 HT 10 NL 11 VT 12 NP 13 CR 14 SO 15 SI
16 DLE 17 DC1 18 DC2 19 DC3 20 DC4 21 NAK 22 SYN 23 ETB
24 CAN 25 EM 26 SUB 27 ESC 28 FS 29 GS 30 RS 31 US
32 SP 33 ! 34 " 35 # 36 $ 37 % 38 & 39 '
40 ( 41 ) 42 * 43 + 44 , 45 - 46 . 47 /
48 0 49 1 50 2 51 3 52 4 53 5 54 6 55 7
56 8 57 9 58 : 59 ; 60 < 61 = 62 > 63 ?
64 @ 65 A 66 B 67 C 68 D 69 E 70 F 71 G
72 H 73 I 74 J 75 K 76 L 77 M 78 N 79 O
80 P 81 Q 82 R 83 S 84 T 85 U 86 V 87 W
88 X 89 Y 90 Z 91 [ 92 93 ] 94 ^ 95 _
96 ` 97 a 98 b 99 c 100 d 101 e 102 f 103 g
104 h 105 i 106 j 107 k 108 l 109 m 110 n 111 o
112 p 113 q 114 r 115 s 116 t 117 u 118 v 119 w
120 x 121 y 122 z 123 { 124 | 125 } 126 ~ 127 DEL
FILES
/usr/pub/ascii On-line chart of octal and hexadecimal values for the ASCII character set.
SunOS 5.11 19 Apr 2002 ascii(5)