set -A array $(</tmp/inputfile) #reading file in array
c= ${#array[*]} #the no. of elements in the array
i=1
while [ $i -lt $c ]
do
j=`expr $i +1`
v1=`echo ${array[$i]}|cut -d" " -f1`
v2=`echo ${array[$j]}|cut -d" " -f1`
if [ $v1 = $v2 ]
then
array[$i]=`echo F.${array[$i]}`
fi
i=`expr $i +1`
done
i=1
while [ $i -le $c ]
do
x=`echo ${array[$i]|cut -c1`
if [ $x -ne "F" ]
then
`echo ${array[$i]}>>newfile`
fi
done
`cat newfile`
see if the code given above works.
here i am trying to store each lines of the inputfile in an array.
c is the number of array elements. (or the numbert of lines in the input file.)
i am checkimg of the two consecutive fileds have same value. if true i am setting F as the 1st character in the 1st of the two lines. then store the same in the array.
later in another loop i am checking if the 1st character of any line is not F (this marks that this line has not been repeated). if true i am writing that to newfile.
newfile is the reqd ouput file.
Last edited by Scott; 07-01-2010 at 07:45 AM..
Reason: Added code tags
Hi
I want to extract certain text between two line numbers like
23234234324 and
54446655567567
How do I do this with a simple sed or awk command?
Thank you.
---------- Post updated at 06:16 PM ---------- Previous update was at 05:55 PM ----------
found it:
sed -n '#1,#2p'... (1 Reply)
This is my problem, my file (file A) contains the following information:
Now, I would like to create a file (file B) containing only the lines with 10 or more characters but less than 20 with their corresponding ID:
Then, I need to compare the entries and determine their frequency. Thus, I... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I have a file with over 100,000 lines. I would like to be able extract 5000 lines at a time and give it as an input to another program.
sed -n '1,5000p' <myfile> > myOut
Similarly for
5001-10000
10001-15000
....
How can I do this in a loop?
Thanks,
Guss (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to extract the lines from file1 by using the index numbers from file2. In example,
cat file1.txt
265 ABC 956 ...
698 DFA 456 ...
456 DDD 145 ...
125 DSG 154 ...
459 CGB 156 ...
490 ASF 456 ...
484 XFH 489 ...
679 hgt 481 ...
111 dfg 986 ...
356 vhn 444 ...... (7 Replies)
hello!
could u, please, help:
i have a file that includes 6 columns space delimited
1 rs4477212 0 82154 0 T
1 rs6680825 0 91472 0 G
1 rs9326626 0 570178 0 T
1 rs12123356 0 724702 0 C
I need to extract to a separate file lines... (5 Replies)
I have a combination of patterns to search.
file.txt contains below:
H2016-02-10
A74867712
I1556539758
Xjdflk534jfl
W0000055722327732
W0000056029009389
A74867865
I1556536434
W0000055822970840
W0000055722325916
A74868015
I1556541270
C0000055928920421
E
lines starting with A are... (5 Replies)
e.g.
File name: File.txt
cat File.txt
Result:
#INBOUND_QUEUE=FAQ1
INBOUND_QUEUE=FAQ2
I want to get the value for one which is not commented out.
Thanks, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tanu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
vorbiscomment
VORBISCOMMENT(1) Vorbis Tools VORBISCOMMENT(1)NAME
vorbiscomment - edits Ogg Vorbis comments
SYNOPSIS
vorbiscomment [-l] file.ogg
vorbiscomment -a [ -t "tag=value" ] in.ogg out.ogg
vorbiscomment -w in.ogg out.ogg
DESCRIPTION
vorbiscomment reads, modifies, and appends Ogg Vorbis audio file metadata tags.
OPTIONS -a Append comments.
-c commentfile
Take comments from a file. The file is the same format as is output by the the -l option: one element per line in 'tag=value' for-
mat.
-h Show command help.
-l List the comments in the ogg vorbis file.
-q Quiet mode. No messages are displayed.
-t 'tag=value'
Specify a new tag on the command line. Each tag is given as a single string. The part before the '=' is treated as the tag name and
the part after as the value.
-w Replace comments with the new set given either on the command line with -t or from a file with -c.
EXAMPLES
To just see what comment tags are in a file:
vorbiscomment -l file.ogg
To edit those comments:
vorbiscomment -l file.ogg > file.txt
[edit the comments in file.txt to your statisfaction]
vorbiscomment -w -c file.txt file.ogg newfile.ogg
To simply add a comment:
vorbiscomment -a -t 'ARTIST=No One You Know' file.ogg newfile.ogg
SEE ALSO
See http://xiph.org/ogg/vorbis/doc/v-comment.html for documentation on the Ogg Vorbis tag format, including a suggested list of canonical
tag names.
AUTHORS
Program Authors:
Michael Smith <msmith@labyrinth.net.au>
Ralph Giles <giles@xiph.org>
Manpage Author:
Christopher L Cheney <ccheney@debian.org>
Xiph.org Foundation December 24, 2001 VORBISCOMMENT(1)