06-09-2010
Last edited by jimmy_y; 06-09-2010 at 02:02 AM..
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Strange behaviour of the strftime() function from gawk (3.1.5):
$ awk 'BEGIN{print strftime("%T", 3600)}'
> 02:00:00
$ awk 'BEGIN{print strftime("%T", 0)}'
> 01:00:00
Obviously something with DST but I can not figure out why? To me 3600 epoch seconds remains 01:00, DST or not.
From... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ripat
2 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I really would appreciate some help with a bash script for some string manipulation on an SQL dump:
I'd like to be able to rename "sites/WHATEVER/files" to "sites/SOMETHINGELSE/files" within the sql dump.
This is quite easy with sed:
sed -e... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: otrotipo
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Thanks for giving your time and effort to answer questions and helping newbies like me understand awk.
I have a huge file, millions of lines, so perl takes quite a bit of time, I'd like to convert these perl one liners to awk.
Basically I'd like all lines with ISA sandwiched between... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: verge
9 Replies
4. Programming
HI,
i wish to convert a millsec value to a readable string format.
the one option is to use strftime.
However this is a bit costly (1-5 micros).
is there a a faster way to do so with just string manipulation
(Note i have the date object which has the time details but wish o avoid strftime) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wojtyla
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
hello,
I want to replace awk with a perl one liner in unix.
i use in awk REGEX and FS ( field separator) because
awk syntaxes in different unix os versions have not the same behaviour.
Awk, Nawk and GNU Awk Cheat Sheet - good coders code, great reuse
i have a file named "file" and want... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bora99
5 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I know sed and awk has options to give range of line numbers, but
I need to replace pattern in specific lines
Something like
sed -e '1s,14s,26s/pattern/new pattern/' file name
Can somebody help me in this....
I am fine with see/awk/perl
Thank you in advance (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: dani777
9 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
cat file
41285.000034722223 41285.000567129631
41285.000069444446 41285.001122685186
41285.000092592592 41285.001620370371
41285.000138888892 41285.00340277778
41285.000185185185 41285.000405092593
41285.000196759262 41285.000856481478
41285.000208333331 41285.000717592593... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: phpshell
5 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to use AWK to filter on some dates in a field by converting them to Unix Time.
mktime(strftime(format,"6-FEB-2013 08:50:03.841")What is the proper format for my date strings as they appear in my database?
My first thought is %d-%b-%Y %H:%M:%Sbut I see the following issues:
%d is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Michael Stora
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a lines like below, captured from rrdtool fetch command,
1395295200 2.0629986254e+06 7.4634784967e+05
1395297000 2.0198121616e+06 6.8658888903e+05
1395298800 1.8787141122e+06 6.7482866452e+05
1395300600 1.7586118678e+06 6.7867977653e+05
1395302400 1.8222762151e+06 7.1301678859e+05I'm... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rk4k
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
My code below will print only the email address from all lines. I want to convert it with sed or awk.. also what if i just want to find only filenames.
cat LIS_EMAIL | perl -wne'while(/+@+\w+/g){print "$&\n"}'
Hoping to extract the filename such us .exe, .bin. From file that has scrambled... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: invinzin21
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
git-stripspace
GIT-STRIPSPACE(1) Git Manual GIT-STRIPSPACE(1)
NAME
git-stripspace - Remove unnecessary whitespace
SYNOPSIS
git stripspace [-s | --strip-comments] < input
DESCRIPTION
Clean the input in the manner used by Git for text such as commit messages, notes, tags and branch descriptions.
With no arguments, this will:
o remove trailing whitespace from all lines
o collapse multiple consecutive empty lines into one empty line
o remove empty lines from the beginning and end of the input
o add a missing
to the last line if necessary.
In the case where the input consists entirely of whitespace characters, no output will be produced.
NOTE: This is intended for cleaning metadata, prefer the --whitespace=fix mode of git-apply(1) for correcting whitespace of patches or
files in the repository.
OPTIONS
-s, --strip-comments
Skip and remove all lines starting with comment character (default #).
-c, --comment-lines
Prepend comment character and blank to each line. Lines will automatically be terminated with a newline. On empty lines, only the
comment character will be prepended.
EXAMPLES
Given the following noisy input with $ indicating the end of a line:
|A brief introduction $
| $
|$
|A new paragraph$
|# with a commented-out line $
|explaining lots of stuff.$
|$
|# An old paragraph, also commented-out. $
| $
|The end.$
| $
Use git stripspace with no arguments to obtain:
|A brief introduction$
|$
|A new paragraph$
|# with a commented-out line$
|explaining lots of stuff.$
|$
|# An old paragraph, also commented-out.$
|$
|The end.$
Use git stripspace --strip-comments to obtain:
|A brief introduction$
|$
|A new paragraph$
|explaining lots of stuff.$
|$
|The end.$
GIT
Part of the git(1) suite
Git 1.8.3.1 06/10/2014 GIT-STRIPSPACE(1)