Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers comparing field to current year Post 302440784 by Franklin52 on Wednesday 28th of July 2010 09:25:44 AM
Old 07-28-2010
Something like this?
Code:
awk -F"[/\"]" -v d="8/1/2011" '
BEGIN{
  split(d,a,"/")
  dat=sprintf("%d%02d%02d",a[3],a[1],a[2])
}
sprintf("%d%02d%02d",$8,$6,$7) > dat {
  print > "new_dat"
  next
}
1' file > old_dat

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Comparing CRON PID w/Current PPID

All, I've got a script that needs to check if it was started by cron. The code seems to be right, but it's not running correctly if cron starts it. Am I getting the pid's correctly? I'm not having any luck figuring it out. :confused: Any help is appreciated! CRON_ID=$(ps -aef | grep... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: GregWold
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

read file and print additional rows till current year

Hi all i have a file like 2006,1,2 2007,2,3 2008,3,4 I will read this and my output should be like 2006,1,2 2007,1,2 2008,1,2 2007,2,3 2008,2,3 2008,3,4 Giving the explanation, we will read the first line of the file and if the year any other than current year, we will print as many... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vasuarjula
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Comparing current date

Hi, I have start date and end date in the following format. I need to check the current date is greater than the start date and less than the end date. if i use the command date --date "Tue 6:00 AM", it takes next Tues day not the current week's Tues day. Is there a way to get the current Tues... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: bharathappriyan
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

ksh comparing current and previous lines

Hi, I am currently trying to work out how to compare one line with the last line I have read in via ksh. I have a file which has sorted output from a previous sort command so all the lines are in order already and the file would look something like show below. Each line has a name and a time... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: paulie
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Comparing two files with datestamp to current date

Hi, I am new to unix and I am stuck on how to compare two .zip file with date stamp in my directory. I need to compare out of the two file which is oldest to current date and unzip it after that done continue to unzip the second zip file. Thanks for your help. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lilvi3tboix1
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare Field in Current Line with Field in Previous

Hi Guys I have the following file Essentially, I am trying to find the right awk/sed syntax in order to produce the following 3 distinct files from the file above: Basically, I want to print the lines of the file as long as the second field of the current line is equal to the... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: moutaye
9 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Change time with current year

Hi, How can i change the time below (red font) with the current year? Thank You in advance. hostname 2007-Feb-9 /u100/DEVCO/Patching a.log hostname 2010-Jun-25 /u100/DEVCO/DumpCleaner a.log hostname 2011-Jun-25 /u100/DEVCO/DumpCleaner/sample a.log hostname 23:44-Jun-25... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lienyca
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to pass current year and month in FOR LOOP in UNIX shell scripting?

Hi Team, I have created a script and using FOR LOOP like this and it is working fine. for Month in 201212 201301 201302 201303 do echo "Starting the statistics gathering of $Month partitions " done But in my scripts the " Month " variable is hard-coded. Can you please any one... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shoan
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Comparing the dates with the current date in perl scripting

Hi i have a file containg dates likebelow 4/30/2013 3/31/2013 4/30/2013 4/16/2013 4/30/2013 4/30/2013 5/30/2013 5/30/2013 4/30/2013 5/30/2013 5/30/2013 3/31/2013 now i want to compare the above dates with current date and i want to display the difference . (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: siva kumar
10 Replies

10. HP-UX

Comparing the timestamp of the file to current time

I have a file like this -rwxr-xr-x 1 rewq other 168 Jan 13 07:05 check_files.sh I want to compare (check_files.sh time) with the current time to see if its is older than 2 hours or not if it is not older than 2 hrs then do something.can someone help me on this?.I dont... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: haadiya
7 Replies
PRINTF(3S)																PRINTF(3S)

NAME
printf, fprintf, sprintf, vfprintf, vsprintf - formatted output conversion SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> char *printf(format [, arg ] ... ) char *format; char *fprintf(stream, format [, arg ] ... ) FILE *stream; char *format; int sprintf(s, format [, arg ] ... ) char *s, *format; #include <varargs.h> char *vprintf(format, args) char *format; va_list args; char *vfprintf(stream, format, args) FILE *stream; char *format; va_list args; int vsprintf(s, format, args) char *s, *format; va_list args; DESCRIPTION
Printf places output on the standard output stream stdout. Fprintf places output on the named output stream. Sprintf places `output' in the string s, followed by the character `'. Alternate forms, in which the arguments have already been captured using the variable-length argument facilities of varargs(3), are available under the names vprintf, vfprintf, and vsprintf. Each of these functions converts, formats, and prints its arguments after the first under control of the first argument. The first argu- ment is a character string which contains two types of objects: plain characters, which are simply copied to the output stream, and conver- sion specifications, each of which causes conversion and printing of the next successive arg printf. Each conversion specification is introduced by the character %. The remainder of the conversion specification includes in the following order o a minus sign `-' which specifies left adjustment of the converted value in the indicated field; o an optional digit string specifying a field width; if the converted value has fewer characters than the field width it will be blank-padded on the left (or right, if the left-adjustment indicator has been given) to make up the field width; if the field width begins with a zero, zero-padding will be done instead of blank-padding; o an optional period, followed by an optional digit string giving a precision which specifies the number of digits to appear after the decimal point, for e- and f-conversion, or the maximum number of characters to be printed from a string; o the character l specifying that a following d, o, x, or u corresponds to a long integer arg; o a character which indicates the type of conversion to be applied. A field width or precision may be `*' instead of a digit string. In this case an integer arg supplies the field width or precision. The conversion characters and their meanings are dox The integer arg is converted to signed decimal, unsigned octal, or unsigned hexadecimal notation respectively. f The float or double arg is converted to decimal notation in the style `[-]ddd.ddd' where the number of d's after the decimal point is equal to the precision specification for the argument. If the precision is missing, 6 digits are given; if the precision is explicitly 0, no digits and no decimal point are printed. e The float or double arg is converted in the style `[-]d.ddde+-dd' where there is one digit before the decimal point and the number after is equal to the precision specification for the argument; when the precision is missing, 6 digits are produced. g The float or double arg is printed in style d, in style f, or in style e, whichever gives full precision in minimum space. c The character arg is printed. s Arg is taken to be a string (character pointer) and characters from the string are printed until a null character or until the num- ber of characters indicated by the precision specification is reached; however if the precision is 0 or missing all characters up to a null are printed. u The unsigned integer arg is converted to decimal and printed (the result will be in the range 0 through MAXUINT, where MAXUINT equals 4294967295 on a VAX-11 and 65535 on a PDP-11). % Print a `%'; no argument is converted. In no case does a non-existent or small field width cause truncation of a field; padding takes place only if the specified field width exceeds the actual width. Characters generated by printf are printed as by putc(3S). RETURN VALUE
The functions all return the number of characters printed, or -1 if an error occurred. EXAMPLES
To print a date and time in the form `Sunday, July 3, 10:02', where weekday and month are pointers to null-terminated strings: printf("%s, %s %d, %02d:%02d", weekday, month, day, hour, min); To print pi to 5 decimals: printf("pi = %.5f", 4*atan(1.0)); SEE ALSO
putc(3S), scanf(3S) BUGS
Very wide fields (>300 characters) fail. Only sprintf and vsprintf return a count of characters transferred. The functions still supports %D, %O, %U and %X. Do not use these formats, as they will be disappearing real soon now. 7th Edition August 10, 1988 PRINTF(3S)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:54 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy