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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Replacing numbers in bash scripts Post 302424542 by bluesmodular on Tuesday 25th of May 2010 02:35:34 PM
Old 05-25-2010
CPU & Memory Replacing numbers in bash scripts

Hi,

I have lines in some files that look exactly as below, and the line numbers they occur in are always the same. (Lines 136-139)

W 0.00000000 0.00000000 2.00000000
W 0.50000000 0.50000000 2.50000000
W 0.00000000 0.00000000 3.00000000
W 0.50000000 0.50000000 3.50000000

I'd like to replace the last number in each row for each file by numbers related to the variable $vacheight, so that the median of these 4 numbers is always half of $vacheight.

The files are all named "run_example", but are in different folders named "examples#" where # is a number from 140 to 199.

As a related example, Line 117 reads:
Code:
  celldm(3)   = 5.000,

Below is the relevant section of code that works for Line 117 and increments the number on Line 117 by 0.1 each time, in a different folder.

Code:
vacheight=`expr 4.500`
for i in */run_example; do
    printf '117s/= [^,]*/= %s/\nwq\n' "$vacheight" | ed -s "$i"
    vacheight=$(echo "scale=3; $vacheight + 0.100" | bc)
done

Thank you very much for your help!
 

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UTF2(5) 						      BSD File Formats Manual							   UTF2(5)

NAME
utf2 -- Universal character set Transformation Format encoding of runes SYNOPSIS
ENCODING "UTF2" DESCRIPTION
The UTF2 encoding has been deprecated in favour of UTF-8. New applications should not use UTF2. The UTF2 encoding is based on a proposed X-Open multibyte FSS-UCS-TF (File System Safe Universal Character Set Transformation Format) encod- ing as used in Plan 9 from Bell Labs. Although it is capable of representing more than 16 bits, the current implementation is limited to 16 bits as defined by the Unicode Standard. UTF2 representation is backwards compatible with ASCII, so 0x00-0x7f refer to the ASCII character set. The multibyte encoding of runes between 0x0080 and 0xffff consist entirely of bytes whose high order bit is set. The actual encoding is represented by the following table: [0x0000 - 0x007f] [00000000.0bbbbbbb] -> 0bbbbbbb [0x0080 - 0x07ff] [00000bbb.bbbbbbbb] -> 110bbbbb, 10bbbbbb [0x0800 - 0xffff] [bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb] -> 1110bbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb If more than a single representation of a value exists (for example, 0x00; 0xC0 0x80; 0xE0 0x80 0x80) the shortest representation is always used (but the longer ones will be correctly decoded). The final three encodings provided by X-Open: [00000000.000bbbbb.bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb] -> 11110bbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb [000000bb.bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb] -> 111110bb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb [0bbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb.bbbbbbbb] -> 1111110b, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb, 10bbbbbb which provides for the entire proposed ISO-10646 31 bit standard are currently not implemented. SEE ALSO
mklocale(1), setlocale(3), utf8(5) BSD
October 11, 2002 BSD
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