I am writing a script that is running a loop on one file to obtain records from another file.
Using egrep, I am finding matching records in file b, then outputing feilds of both into another file.
****************************
filea=this.txt
fileb=that.txt
cat $filea | while read line
do... (1 Reply)
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. I'm making a (hopefully) simple shell script xml parser that outputs a file I can grep for information. I am writing it because I have yet to find a command line utility that can do this. If you know of one, please just stop now and tell me about it. Even better would be one I can input... (10 Replies)
hi Guys,
Am new to this awesome forum, and yea i need some help here asap thnx :)
i have a directory with over 34000 text files, i need a script that will delete the last line of each of this file without me necessary opening the files.
illustration:-
file1 200 records
file2 130 records... (5 Replies)
My TSV looks like:
Hello my name is John \t Hello world \t Have a good day! \t See you later!
Is there a simple bash script that splits the tsv on tab to:
Hello my name is John
Hello world
Have a good day!
See you later!
I'm really stuck, would appreciate any help! (5 Replies)
I have a very large csv file that I sort by the data that is in the second column. But what I need to do next is split the file in groups of say around 30,000 lines but don't split the data while there is still like data in the in the second column.
Here is some of the data.
... (2 Replies)
I have a below file.
INPUT FILE
select * from customer
MERGE INTO Archive; delete from Employee; using select * from customer;
delete from employee; select * from Employee;
insert into employee(1,1);
OUTPUT FILE
select * from customer
MERGE INTO Archive
delete from Employee
using... (5 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 All,
Greetings everyone !!!
I have a file which has many lines, out of which one line is as below.
I need to search for pattern "varchar(30) Select" and if exists, then split the line as below.
I am trying to achieve this in ksh. Can anyone help me on this. (8 Replies)
I have to split a file containing 100 lines to 5 files say from lines ,1-20 ,21-30 ,31-40 ,51-60 ,61-100
Here is i can do it for 2 file but how to handle it for more than 2 files
awk 'NR < 21{ print >> "a"; next } {print >> "b" }' $input_file
Please advidse.
Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: abhaydas
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
cat
CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)NAME
cat - catenate and print
SYNOPSIS
cat [ -u ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -v ] file ...
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
displays the file on the standard output, and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no input file is given, or if the argument `-' is encountered, cat reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in the block
size recommended by stat(2) unless the standard output is a terminal, when it is line buffered. The -u option makes the output completely
unbuffered.
The -n option displays the output lines preceded by lines numbers, numbered sequentially from 1. Specifying the -b option with the -n
option omits the line numbers from blank lines.
The -s option crushes out multiple adjacent empty lines so that the output is displayed single spaced.
The -v option displays non-printing characters so that they are visible. Control characters print like ^X for control-x; the delete char-
acter (octal 0177) prints as ^?. Non-ascii characters (with the high bit set) are printed as M- (for meta) followed by the character of
the low 7 bits. A -e option may be given with the -v option, which displays a `$' character at the end of each line. Specifying the -t
option with the -v option displays tab characters as ^I.
SEE ALSO cp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)BUGS
Beware of `cat a b >a' and `cat a b >b', which destroy the input files before reading them.
4th Berkeley Distribution May 5, 1986 CAT(1)