I have two files one (numbers file)contains the numbers(approximately 30000) and the other file(record file) contains the records(approximately 40000)which may or may not contain the numbers from that file.
I want to seperate the records which has the field 1=(any of the number from numbers... (15 Replies)
Howdy experts,
We have some ranges of number which belongs to particual group as below.
GroupNo StartRange EndRange
Group0125 935300 935399
Group2006 935400 935476
937430 937459
Group0324 935477 935549
... (6 Replies)
I have a text file that looks like this:
Line1) 2000001 12 34 42.5 122 204 2000001 -2000001 15
Line2) 2000001 14 2000001 38.3 2000001 88 2000001
Line3) 45 2000001 446 2000001 88 2000001
Line4) 2000001 2000001 65 883 2000001 34 2000001 5000 2000001
.
.
.
What I want to do is to scan each... (4 Replies)
hello everyone
i searched the net and i could not find script for this request.
i believe sed command will do it but i'm not sure about how.
my file contains thousands of records, the following is sample:
BEGIN
ASX15001
BEGIN
ASX15000000500020101230
ASX18001020070002010123... (10 Replies)
Hello All,
I am having problem to find what is the smallest number from 90% of highest numbers from all numbers in file. I am having file with thousands of lines and hundreds of columns.
I am familiar mainly with bash but I am open to whatever suggestion witch will lead to the solutions.
If I... (11 Replies)
How would I do this? How could i use <> symbols for numbers in the find/replace code below?
perl -pi -e 's/test/tst/'
OR is there a better way?
100 5000 2 432 4 2 33 4 5 6 65 300 301
needs to be:
100 300 2 300 4 2 33 4 5 6 65 300 300
also it might not always need spaces... i... (12 Replies)
hello every one
I have file with following records
begin
ASX120016719
ASX190006729
ASX153406729
ASX190406759
ASX180006739
end
for each record there is ASX word then 9 digits after it (NO spaces included)
what i want is to :
1- skip ASX
2-skip first 2 digits after ASX word... (16 Replies)
Hi!
I found and then adapt the code for my pipeline...
awk -F"," -vOFS="," '{printf "%0.2f %0.f\n",$2,$4}' xxx > yyy
I add -F"," -vOFS="," (for input and output as csv file) and I change the columns and the number of decimal...
It works but I have also some problems... here my columns
... (7 Replies)
i Have a file as following
view pz19a0c0/1000T_J_3MoDw9DSLh1ZsCubdua-LKOQmbtiVgkIsiMbSiwF467?sessionId=15451401994597121249
view pz19a0c0/100086X67pR0MwzWnhhSO6sAEoxeFMyhh-IIbUCCdxicaQM4FC9?sessionId=154514019945971212494898
view/cart ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Raghuram717
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
byteprefix
BYTEPREFIX(5) File Formats Manual BYTEPREFIX(5)NAME
byteprefix - Configuration for display of sizes
DESCRIPTION
There are two standard ways to use units in computing: base 10 (1 k = 10^3 = 1 000) and base 2 (1 K = 2^10 = 1 024). Historically, most
computer programs have used units in base 2, where 1 KB = 1 024 bytes, 1 MB = 1 048 576 bytes, etc. However, users are more likely to
expect and understand sizes in base 10, as this is the norm outside of computing.
This configuration file is a method for configuring programs (that use libkibi) to display sizes in the user's preferred style. It can be
configured through a configuration file or environment variable (which takes precedence).
When not using the "historic" style, IEC-style prefixes (KiB, MiB, etc.) are used for base 2 units, to disambiguate them from base 10 units
(kB, MB, etc.).
OPTIONS
There are three possible styles (Default: base10):
base2 Display all sizes in Base 2 with IEC prefixes.
1 KiB = 1 024 bytes.
1 MiB = 1 024 KiB = 1 048 576 bytes.
1 GiB = 1 024 MiB = 1 048 576 KiB = 1 073 741 824 bytes.
base10 Display all sizes in Base 10, except for sizes of RAM, which use base 2 with IEC prefixes.
Everything except RAM:
1 kB = 1 000 bytes.
1 MB = 1 000 kB = 1 000 000 bytes.
1 GB = 1 000 MB = 1 000 000 kB = 1 000 000 000 bytes.
RAM:
1 KiB = 1 024 bytes.
1 MiB = 1 024 KiB = 1 048 576 bytes.
1 GiB = 1 024 MiB = 1 048 576 KiB = 1 073 741 824 bytes.
historic
Display all sizes in Base 2, without IEC prefixes.
1 KB = 1 024 bytes.
1 MB = 1 024 KB = 1 048 576 bytes.
1 GB = 1 024 MB = 1 048 576 KB = 1 073 741 824 bytes.
Not recommended. This style uses base units 2 with prefixes usually associated with base 10 units. While it uses KB rather than the
SI (base 10) kB, there is no such distinction beyond the kilobyte range, and the units are ambiguous.
ENVIRONMENT
BYTEPREFIX
This environment variable will override the configured or default style. It should just contain one of the style names, listed in
OPTIONS above.
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
The location of the user's configuration files. If not set, it will be assumed to be ~/.config.
FILES
The preferred style can be set in a system-wide configuration file and/or in user's own configuration file (which will take precedence).
If no configuration file exists, the default style is base10.
/etc/byteprefix or XDG_CONFIG_HOME/byteprefix
This file should contain a single line: format=style. Lines beginning with # are treated as comments.
EXAMPLE
A user wanting base 2 display can set the following in ~/.config/byteprefix:
format=base2
SEE ALSO units(7)libkibi January 2011 BYTEPREFIX(5)