im using this command to return the number of links in my directory,
grep -c -i -h "href" *html */*html *htm *shtml
is there a way of adding these to get the total?
Cheers (3 Replies)
:confused:
I have plain text file "tmp" which include a range of numbers(bytes), say like:
123
234
567
2434
2323
213123
How can I add them and display out.
should I use AWK, then how?
I am a newer in Bourne shell, please give me a hand, thanks a lot (7 Replies)
I've refined the filesystem size using awk and directed to a file name.
eg, here's the content in a file called "numbers"
$cat numbers
345
543
23423456
44435
546
.
.
how do you write a script to all these numbers to get the total?
thanks a lot. (9 Replies)
I need to add a list of numbers contained in a file. For example, the file would look like this:
10
290
342
5409
I need to get a total sum of all the numbers in the list. Any ideas?
Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hello.
I new to Shell Scripting.
I have a file and here is the output of the file.
1.1M
1.1M
3.3M
149K
61K
75K
144K
135K
82K
170K
327K
2.0M
219K
165K (8 Replies)
Hi All,
I have written the below to add the numbers in a column. Postive numbers are unsigned and negative numbers are signed in the file. After the below cmd I am getting -0.00 , instead of 0.00. Can someone guide me on what I am missing in the cmd.
grep '^L' $FileName| awk -F"|" ' {... (7 Replies)
Hello,
How to add numbers that are read from a file /tmp/test
The content of the file look like
1234
234
432
1235
123
I read the file content in a for loop
f=/tmp/test
for i in `cat $f`
do
.
.
done
Santhosh (11 Replies)
Hi experts, I've been struggling to format a large genetic dataset. It's complicated to explain so I'll simply post example input/output
$cat input.txt
ID GENE pos start end
blah1 coolgene 1 3 5
blah2 coolgene 1 4 6
blah3 coolgene 1 4 ... (4 Replies)
ECHO(1) BSD General Commands Manual ECHO(1)NAME
echo -- write arguments to the standard output
SYNOPSIS
echo [-n] [string ...]
DESCRIPTION
The echo utility writes any specified operands, separated by single blank (' ') characters and followed by a newline ('
') character, to the
standard output.
The following option is available:
-n Do not print the trailing newline character. This may also be achieved by appending 'c' to the end of the string, as is done by iBCS2
compatible systems. Note that this option as well as the effect of 'c' are implementation-defined in IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
(``POSIX.1'') as amended by Cor. 1-2002. Applications aiming for maximum portability are strongly encouraged to use printf(1) to sup-
press the newline character.
Some shells may provide a builtin echo command which is similar or identical to this utility. Most notably, the builtin echo in sh(1) does
not accept the -n option. Consult the builtin(1) manual page.
EXIT STATUS
The echo utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO builtin(1), csh(1), printf(1), sh(1)STANDARDS
The echo utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'') as amended by Cor. 1-2002.
BSD April 12, 2003 BSD