Hi ,
I have a peculiar case, where my sed command is working on a file which contains lines of small length.
sed "s/XYZ:1/XYZ:3/g" abc.txt > xyz.txt
when abc.txt contains lines of small length(currently around 80 chars) , this sed command is working fine.
when abc.txt contains lines of... (3 Replies)
Hi, I've been searching in this forum for the last 4 hours trying to do one thing: search 2 lines and delete the above line. So far I have not be able to find something similar in this forum, so I need help. This is what I'm trying to do. For example, I have a file called file1:
file1
word1... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file will 1000 lines.... I want to deleted some line in the file... like 800-850 lines i want to remove in that...
can somebody help me..?
thanks. (2 Replies)
Hello.
My file is like this:
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
I want to delete all lines after the 3rd line, means after the "c". Is there any way to do this? The lines differ between them and the lines I want to delete does not have a specific word, or the lines I want to keep (a,b,c) does not have a... (4 Replies)
I have file with 10000 records and i need to delete the lines in single shot based on line number range say from 10 to 51 , 53 to 59 , 105 to 107, 311 to 592 etc... between range works fine for me but how to achive for above case? please help
sed '10,51 {d}' infile > outfile (5 Replies)
I have a file with ~200K lines, I need to delete 4K lines in it. There is no range.
I do have the line numbers of the lines which I want to be deleted.
I did tried using
> cat del.lines
sed '510d;12d;219d;......;3999d' file
> source del.lines
Word too long.
I even tried... (2 Replies)
Hi
I am using the following command to delete a line from the file by line number:
line_number=14
sed "${line_number}d" inputfilename > newfilename
Is there a way to modify this command to specify the range of lines to be deleted, lets say from line 14 till line 5 ?
I tried using the... (5 Replies)
Here is an example of a file...
foo1,good
foo1,good
foo2,error
foo2,good
Note that both rows for foo1 have good in the 2nd field, but one of the foo2 rows has error...
I need something in ksh/awk/perl that will delete ALL foo2 lines if ANY of them have error in the 2nd field...so:
... (7 Replies)
Hi ,
i have a file with data as below.This is same file. But actual file contains to many rows.
i want to search for a string "Field 039 00" and delete that line and previous 3 lines in that file.. Can some body suggested me how can i do using either sed or awk command ?
Field 004... (7 Replies)
Shell : bash
OS : RHEL 6.8
I have a file like below.
$ cat pattern.txt
hello
txt1
txt2
txt3
some other text
txt4
I want to remove all lines in this file except the ones starting with txt . How can I do this ? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: omega3
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
diff
DIFF(1) General Commands Manual DIFF(1)NAME
diff - differential file comparator
SYNOPSIS
diff [ -efbh ] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
Diff tells what lines must be changed in two files to bring them into agreement. If file1 (file2) is `-', the standard input is used. If
file1 (file2) is a directory, then a file in that directory whose file-name is the same as the file-name of file2 (file1) is used. The
normal output contains lines of these forms:
n1 a n3,n4
n1,n2 d n3
n1,n2 c n3,n4
These lines resemble ed commands to convert file1 into file2. The numbers after the letters pertain to file2. In fact, by exchanging `a'
for `d' and reading backward one may ascertain equally how to convert file2 into file1. As in ed, identical pairs where n1 = n2 or n3 = n4
are abbreviated as a single number.
Following each of these lines come all the lines that are affected in the first file flagged by `<', then all the lines that are affected
in the second file flagged by `>'.
The -b option causes trailing blanks (spaces and tabs) to be ignored and other strings of blanks to compare equal.
The -e option produces a script of a, c and d commands for the editor ed, which will recreate file2 from file1. The -f option produces a
similar script, not useful with ed, in the opposite order. In connection with -e, the following shell program may help maintain multiple
versions of a file. Only an ancestral file ($1) and a chain of version-to-version ed scripts ($2,$3,...) made by diff need be on hand. A
`latest version' appears on the standard output.
(shift; cat $*; echo '1,$p') | ed - $1
Except in rare circumstances, diff finds a smallest sufficient set of file differences.
Option -h does a fast, half-hearted job. It works only when changed stretches are short and well separated, but does work on files of
unlimited length. Options -e and -f are unavailable with -h.
FILES
/tmp/d?????
/usr/lib/diffh for -h
SEE ALSO cmp(1), comm(1), ed(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 for no differences, 1 for some, 2 for trouble.
BUGS
Editing scripts produced under the -e or -f option are naive about creating lines consisting of a single `.'.
DIFF(1)