Hello all.
Sorry, I know this question is similar to many others, but I just can seem to put together exactly what I need.
My file is tab delimitted and contains approximately 1 million rows. I would like to send lines 1,4,& 7 to a file. Lines 2, 5, & 8 to a second file. Lines 3, 6, & 9 to... (11 Replies)
Hello Everyone.
I am trying to display contains of a file from a specific line to a specific line(let say, from line number 3 to line number 5). For this I got the shell script as shown below:
if ; then
if ; then
tail +$1 $3 | head -n $2
else
... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I search all forum, but I can not find solutions of my problem :(
I have multiple files (5000 files), inside there is this data :
FILE 1:
1195.921 -898.995 0.750312E-02-0.497526E-02 0.195382E-05 0.609417E-05
-2021.287 1305.479-0.819754E-02 0.107572E-01 0.313018E-05 0.885066E-05
... (15 Replies)
I have a file that contains 87 lines, each with a set of coordinates (x & y). This file looks like:
1 200.3 -0.3
2 201.7 -0.32
...
87 200.2 -0.314
I have another file which contains data that was taken at certain of these 87 positions. i.e.:
37 125
42 175
86 142
where the first... (1 Reply)
Hi I have a file with over a million lines (rows) and I want to split everything from 500,000 to a million into another file (to make the file smaller). Is there a simple command for this?
Thank you
Phil (4 Replies)
Hi
i have requirement like below
M <form_name> sdasadasdMklkM
D ......
D .....
M form_name> sdasadasdMklkM
D ......
D .....
D ......
D .....
M form_name> sdasadasdMklkM
D ......
M form_name> sdasadasdMklkM
i want split file based on line number by finding... (10 Replies)
Hi,
Need to sort file based on the number of delimeters in the lines.
cat testfile
/home/oracle/testdb
/home
/home/oracle/testdb/newdb
/home/oracle
Here delimeter is "/"
expected Output:
/home/oracle/testdb/newdb
/home/oracle/testdb
/home/oracle
/home (3 Replies)
Hi friends, here is my problem.
I have three files like this..
cat file1.txt
=======
unix is best
unix is best
linux is best
unix is best
linux is best
linux is best
unix is best
unix is best
cat file2.txt
========
Windows performs better
Mac OS performs better
Windows... (4 Replies)
Dear Experts
my scenario is as follows...
I have one source folder "Source" and 2 target folders "Target_123456" & "Target_789101". I have 2 series of files. 123456 series and 789101 series. Each series has got 3 types of fiels "Debit", "Refund", "Claims".
All files are getting... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: phani333
17 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
yexpand
YEXPAND(1) General Commands Manual YEXPAND(1)NAME
yexpand - tool to expand environment variables in Nypatchy cradles
SYNOPSIS
yexpand inputfile [ outputfile ]
DESCRIPTION
yexpand is a very simple script to expand environment variables in a text file to their current values in the shell environment. It was
written to be used with nypatchy cradles. It is recommended you not try to use it for any other purposes (note BUGS below).
USAGE
yexpand takes inputfile as input, replaces all instances of shell variables (in the form $VARIABLE or ${VARIABLE}) with their current val-
ues in the environment, and saves the result to outputfile. Undefined variables are replaced with the empty string. If outputfile is not
given, the result is instead saved to the current directory as a file of the same name as inputfile. Thus an input file in the current
directory will be overwritten.
BUGS
This script is very simple-minded. Since it basically just echos its input file as a here-doc, it will attempt to perform all types of
shell substitution (command substitution, etc.) as well as variable substitution. Hence it is likely to fail on anything except the very
simplest text files.
Additionally, this script creates a temporary file. The file is created in the current directory, so there should not be security implica-
tions. However, any existing file named file.yexp (where file is the basename of inputfile) in the current directory will be overwritten
and then deleted.
SEE ALSO fcasplit(1), nycheck(1), nydiff(1), nyindex(1), nylist(1), nymerge(1), nypatchy(1), nyshell(1), nysynopt(1), nytidy(1)
The reference manual for the Nypatchy suite of programs is available in compressed PostScript format at the following URL:
http://wwwasdoc.web.cern.ch/wwwasdoc/psdir/p5refman.ps.gz
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Kevin McCarty <kmccarty@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). It is
licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2 or later (at your choice).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) Kevin B. McCarty, 2008.
Mar 12, 2008 YEXPAND(1)