Hi All
I have a field being returned from the DB that when opened in Vi shows a ^M before the rest of the field is displayed on the next line.
I need it so that the only newline character is the end of the line since I need to transform my file into an Excel report.
Thus my idea is to... (1 Reply)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hi All
I have a field being returned from the DB that when opened in Vi shows a ^M before the rest of the field is displayed on the next line.
I need it so that the only newline character is the end of the... (14 Replies)
Hi,
How to replace any character in a file with a newline character using sed ..
Ex:
To replace ',' with newline
Input:
abcd,efgh,ijkl,mnop
Output:
abcd
efgh
ijkl
mnop
Thnx in advance.
Regards,
Sasidhar (5 Replies)
Greetings!
Can we automate the process of removing a newline char from selected rows in a fixed width file using a shell?
Input is like
abcd1234
xyzd1234
abcd
a1b2c3d4
abcd1234
xyzd1234
xx
abcd1234
Expected output -
abcd1234xyzd1234
abcda1b2c3d4abcd1234xyzd1234
xxabcd1234
... (3 Replies)
I would like to add a line to the end of a single column text file. How do I go about doing that?
Input:
BEGIN
1
2
3
Output:
BEGIN
1
2
3
END
Thanks! (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have 4 big files which contains one big line containing formatted character records, I need to format each file in such way that each File will have 95 Characters per line. Last line of each file will have newline character at end.
Before:-
File Name:- File1.dat
102 121340560... (10 Replies)
Input eg:
Ouput Expected.
The #rd line had the unexpted new line, which need to be replaced with space.
I was planing to go with checking the length of each line using awk and if the length is less than the defeined limit, (12 in above case) will replace the newline with space.
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: deepakwins
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
vis
VIS(1) BSD General Commands Manual VIS(1)NAME
vis -- display non-printable characters in a visual format
SYNOPSIS
vis [-cbflnostw] [-F foldwidth] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The vis utility is a filter for converting non-printable characters into a visual representation. It differs from 'cat -v' in that the form
is unique and invertible. By default, all non-graphic characters except space, tab, and newline are encoded. A detailed description of the
various visual formats is given in vis(3).
The options are as follows:
-b Turns off prepending of backslash before up-arrow control sequences and meta characters, and disables the doubling of backslashes.
This produces output which is neither invertible or precise, but does represent a minimum of change to the input. It is similar to
``cat -v''.
-c Request a format which displays a small subset of the non-printable characters using C-style backslash sequences.
-F Causes vis to fold output lines to foldwidth columns (default 80), like fold(1), except that a hidden newline sequence is used,
(which is removed when inverting the file back to its original form with unvis(1)). If the last character in the encoded file does
not end in a newline, a hidden newline sequence is appended to the output. This makes the output usable with various editors and
other utilities which typically don't work with partial lines.
-f Same as -F.
-l Mark newlines with the visible sequence '$', followed by the newline.
-n Turns off any encoding, except for the fact that backslashes are still doubled and hidden newline sequences inserted if -f or -F is
selected. When combined with the -f flag, vis becomes like an invertible version of the fold(1) utility. That is, the output can be
unfolded by running the output through unvis(1).
-o Request a format which displays non-printable characters as an octal number, ddd.
-s Only characters considered unsafe to send to a terminal are encoded. This flag allows backspace, bell, and carriage return in addi-
tion to the default space, tab and newline.
-t Tabs are also encoded.
-w White space (space-tab-newline) is also encoded.
SEE ALSO unvis(1), vis(3)HISTORY
The vis command appeared in 4.4BSD.
BSD April 19, 1994 BSD