Not clear from this typo what you want to know ... but this could help. Please post a Hexadecimal representation of the contents of your file:
I cannot check your OKI escape sequences. If we show you what is in the file, you can compare it with instructions in the printer manual.
If the escape sequences need changing it is quite easy to use unix shell "echo" to create escape sequences in a manner which is easy to follow. Personally I would not use "vi" to edit a file containing control codes.
Btw. I don't think that what "vi" displays is reliable if you want to know exactly what is in a file. The editor "vi" will not display null (Hex 00) and it is not possible to enter null into a file with "vi" (even with the "vi" key sequence ctrl/v ctrl/@). We don't know yet whether you need null (Hex 00), zero (Hex 30), or zero zero (Hex 3030) in the file.
Last edited by methyl; 03-09-2010 at 07:59 PM..
Reason: layout
I need to check ftp'd incoming files for characters that are not alphanumeric,<tab>, <cr>, or <lf> characters. Each file would have 10-20,000 line with up to 3,000 characters per line. Should I use awk, sed, or grep and what would the command look like to do such a search? Thanks much to anyone... (2 Replies)
Sometimes obvious things... are not so obvious. I always thought that it was possible to grep non printable characters but not with my GNU grep (5.2.1) version.
printf "Hello\tWorld" | grep -l '\t'
printf "Hello\tWorld" | grep -l '\x09'
printf "Hello\tWorld" | grep -l '\x{09}'
None of them... (3 Replies)
Hi,
We have a non printable character "®" in our file , we want to remove this character, we tried tr -dc '' < oldfile> newfile but this command is removing all new line entries along with the non printable character and all the records are coming in one line(it is changing the format of the... (2 Replies)
Hi,
in a file, i have records as below:
123|62|absnb|267629
123|267|28728|uiuip
123|567|26761|2676
i want to remove the non printable characters after the end of each record.
I guess there are certain charcters but not visible.
i don't know what character that is exactly.
I used... (2 Replies)
When I do the file I get ELF 32-bit MSB executable SPARC Version 1, dynamically linked, not stripped
I am almost 100% sure I was able to print a readable version of this file in the past but I cannot remember how. Is it possible to convert this file into something that can be read and or... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to find non-printable characters in a string. The sting could have alphanumeric, puntuations and characters like (*&%$#.') but not non-printable (or that is what I think they are called) which are introduced when you copy any text from DOS to unix box.
Input string1:... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have a huge file (50 Mil rows) which has certain non-printable ASCII characters in it. I am cleaning the file by deleting those characters using the following command -
tr -cd '\11\12\15\40-\176' < unclean_file > clean_file
Please note that I am excluding the following -
tab,... (6 Replies)
For some testing I want to insert a non printable character in a file. How to do it? I inserted ctrl-v ctrl-k through vi. But I do not think it is a proper non printable character. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Soham
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
escape
escape(1) Mail Avenger 0.8.3 escape(1)NAME
escape - escape shell special characters in a string
SYNOPSIS
escape string
DESCRIPTION
escape prepends a "" character to all shell special characters in string, making it safe to compose a shell command with the result.
EXAMPLES
The following is a contrived example showing how one can unintentionally end up executing the contents of a string:
$ var='; echo gotcha!'
$ eval echo hi $var
hi
gotcha!
$
Using escape, one can avoid executing the contents of $var:
$ eval echo hi `escape "$var"`
hi ; echo gotcha!
$
A less contrived example is passing arguments to Mail Avenger bodytest commands containing possibly unsafe environment variables. For
example, you might write a hypothetical reject_bcc script to reject mail not explicitly addressed to the recipient:
#!/bin/sh
formail -x to -x cc -x resent-to -x resent-cc
| fgrep "$1" > /dev/null
&& exit 0
echo "<$1>.. address does not accept blind carbon copies"
exit 100
To invoke this script, passing it the recipient address as an argument, you would need to put the following in your Mail Avenger rcpt
script:
bodytest reject_bcc `escape "$RECIPIENT"`
SEE ALSO avenger(1),
The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>.
BUGS
escape is designed for the Bourne shell, which is what Mail Avenger scripts use. escape might or might not work with other shells.
AUTHOR
David Mazieres
Mail Avenger 0.8.3 2012-04-05 escape(1)