08-03-2010
@alister..
oops...My mistake it was..
Guru.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
Suppose i have a file "xyz.txt" which contains
abcdef
ghijklm
nop
Now in want to add "qrst" to the last line such that the file becomes
abcdef
ghijklm
nopqrst
P.S:The o/p i need is
abcdef
ghijklm
nopqrst (and not) nop
qrst (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: subhrap.das
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi I have used many times the various methods to append two lines together in a file.
This time I want to append the 1st line to the second and repeat for the complete file.... an example
This is the file
owns the big brown dog
joe
owns the small black dog
jim
What I want is
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have a file which contains data as below
When we see no pipe character in the line. append those lines to the previous line with pipe character till we get the next line with pipe character with ~(concat with ~)
Input file looks like:
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
Please help me in providing sample code to append the following 4 lines in one row.
Input :
A1/EXT "BAPBSC10/07B/00" 523 090530 0115
RXOCF-430 HY1711 1
EXTERNAL ALARM
DOOR ALARM
Output should be :
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have gps receiver log..its giving readings .like below
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
GPSD,R=1
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Hi,
I need help for below scenario.I have a flat file which is having records seperated by delimiters which will represent each record for oracle table.My Control file will consider each line as one record for that table. Some of the lines are aligned in two/three lines so that records are... (4 Replies)
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
After I create printer queues in AIX, I have to append a filter file location within that printers custom file. within lets say test_queue.txt I need to find the row that starts with :699 and then I need to append on the end the string /usr/local/bin/k_portrait.sh.
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
awk 'BEGIN{FS = "Ç"}
NR == 1 {p = $0; next}
NF > 1 {print p; p = $0}
NF <= 1 {p = (p " " $0)}
END {print p}' input.txt > output.txt
This is what the input data file looks like with broken lines
Code:
29863 Ç890000000 Ç543209911 ÇCHNGOHG
Ç000000001 Ç055 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cumeh1624
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have an XML file and I am tring to extract some data form it, after lot of data cleaning process, I ended up with an issue, and need your urgent support.
my current input data in below format:
<Node>xxxxxx
<Node>yyyyy</Node>
<Node>zzzzzz
<Node>12345</node>
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
i have a file with multiple entries. After some tests with sed i managed to get the file output as follows:
lsn=X-LINK-IN0,apc=661:0,state=avail,avail/links=1/1,
00,2110597,2094790,0,81,529,75649011,56435363,
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mkstr(1) General Commands Manual mkstr(1)
Name
mkstr - create an error message file
Syntax
mkstr [-] messagefile prefix file...
Description
The command is used to create files of error messages. Its use can make programs with large numbers of error diagnostics much smaller, and
reduce system overhead in running the program as the error messages do not have to be constantly swapped in and out.
The command will process each of the specified files, placing a massaged version of the input file in a file whose name consists of the
specified prefix and the original name. A typical usage of would be:
mkstr pistrings xx *.c
This command would cause all the error messages from the C source files in the current directory to be placed in the file pistrings and
processed copies of the source for these files to be placed in files whose names are prefixed with xx.
To process the error messages in the source to the message file keys on the string `error("' in the input stream. Each time it occurs, the
C string starting at the `"' is placed in the message file followed by a null character and a new-line character. The null character ter-
minates the message so it can be easily used when retrieved, the new-line character makes it possible to sensibly the error message file to
see its contents. The massaged copy of the input file then contains a pointer into the file which can be used to retrieve the message,
that is:
char filename[] = "/usr/lib/pi_strings";
int file = -1;
error(a1, a2, a3, a4)
{
char buf[256];
Bif (efil < 0) {
efil = open(efilname, 0);
if (efil < 0) {
oops:
perror(efilname);
exit(2);
}
}
if (lseek(efil, (long) a1, 0) || read(efil, buf, 256) <= 0)
goto oops;
printf(buf, a2, a3, a4);
}
Options
- Places error messages at the end of specified message file.
See Also
xstr(1), lseek(2)
mkstr(1)