I have a file that will sometimes contain a pattern. The pattern is this:
W/D FRM CHK 00
I want to find any lines with this pattern, delete those lines, and also delete the line above and the line below. (1 Reply)
I have a file that will sometimes contain a pattern. The pattern is this:
FRM CHK 0000
I want to find any lines with this pattern, delete those lines, and also delete the line above and the line below. (4 Replies)
I am trying to pull certain pieces of data out of a line of a file that matches a certain pattern:
The three pieces that I want to pull out of this line are the only occurrences of that pattern within the line, but the rest of the line is not consistent in each file. Basically the line is... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am pretty new to pattern matching and extraction using shell scripting. Could anyone please help me in extracting the word matching a pattern from a line in bash.
Input Sample (can vary between any of the 3 samples below):
1) Adaptec SCSI RAID 5445
2) Adaptec SCSI 5445S RAID
3)... (8 Replies)
Hello there, I am new to unix and would like to do the following, hoping someone would give some guide, thanks in advance.
Lets say i have a file like this:
A w x y w x 0.1
B w x y w x 0.3
C w x y w x 0.7
D w x y w x 0.9
E w x y w x 0.2
So i would like to extract line 1 data where line... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have got the below requirement. please suggest.
I have a file like,
Processing Item is:
/data/ing/cfg2/abc.txt
/data/ing/cfg3/bgc.txt
Processing Item is:
/data/cmd/for2/ght.txt
/data/kernal/config.klgt.txt
I want to process the above file to get the output file like,
... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
Suppose i have 4 coloumns in a excel sheet.
Col A Col B Col C Col D
123 time1 abc 8
231 time2 xyz 6
324 time3 abc 4
456 time4 xyz 3
132 time5 abc 2
I want the data of coloum A... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
Looking forward to your advice for the below:
I have a file which contains 2 paragraphs related to a particular pattern. I have to search for those paragraphs from a log file and then print a particular line from those paragraphs.
Sample:
I have one file with the fixed... (3 Replies)
I am trying to combine lines with these conditions:
1. First line starts with text of "libname VALUE db2 datasrc" where VALUE can be any text.
2. If condition1 is met then continue to combine lines through a line that ends with a semicolon.
3. Ignore case when matching patterns and remove any... (5 Replies)
switch(n) Tcl Built-In Commands switch(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
switch - Evaluate one of several scripts, depending on a given value
SYNOPSIS
switch ?options? string pattern body ?pattern body ...?
switch ?options? string {pattern body ?pattern body ...?}
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
The switch command matches its string argument against each of the pattern arguments in order. As soon as it finds a pattern that matches
string it evaluates the following body argument by passing it recursively to the Tcl interpreter and returns the result of that evaluation.
If the last pattern argument is default then it matches anything. If no pattern argument matches string and no default is given, then the
switch command returns an empty string.
If the initial arguments to switch start with - then they are treated as options. The following options are currently supported:
-exact Use exact matching when comparing string to a pattern. This is the default.
-glob When matching string to the patterns, use glob-style matching (i.e. the same as implemented by the string match command).
-regexp When matching string to the patterns, use regular expression matching (as described in the re_syntax reference page).
-- Marks the end of options. The argument following this one will be treated as string even if it starts with a -.
Two syntaxes are provided for the pattern and body arguments. The first uses a separate argument for each of the patterns and commands;
this form is convenient if substitutions are desired on some of the patterns or commands. The second form places all of the patterns and
commands together into a single argument; the argument must have proper list structure, with the elements of the list being the patterns
and commands. The second form makes it easy to construct multi-line switch commands, since the braces around the whole list make it unnec-
essary to include a backslash at the end of each line. Since the pattern arguments are in braces in the second form, no command or vari-
able substitutions are performed on them; this makes the behavior of the second form different than the first form in some cases.
If a body is specified as ``-'' it means that the body for the next pattern should also be used as the body for this pattern (if the next
pattern also has a body of ``-'' then the body after that is used, and so on). This feature makes it possible to share a single body among
several patterns.
Beware of how you place comments in switch commands. Comments should only be placed inside the execution body of one of the patterns, and
not intermingled with the patterns.
Below are some examples of switch commands:
switch abc a - b {format 1} abc {format 2} default {format 3}
will return 2,
switch -regexp aaab {
^a.*b$ -
b {format 1}
a* {format 2}
default {format 3}
}
will return 1, and
switch xyz {
a
-
b
{
# Correct Comment Placement
format 1
}
a*
{format 2}
default
{format 3}
}
will return 3.
SEE ALSO
for(n), if(n), regexp(n)
KEYWORDS
switch, match, regular expression
Tcl 7.0 switch(n)