09-20-2010
Ah.... I wondered how it cut so many lines. It worked for the cases I looked for, but I should have looked closer.
No, that won't do at all. I need to inspect each line, and compare it to the next.
Can you tell me why what I have isn't working for me? I'm trying to take the first line, see if the second line is the first with any more characters, and then if so, replace the whole thing with the second line.
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
the file contains the follwoing lines
/*
* Copyright (C) 1995-1996 by XXX Corporation. This program
* contains proprietary and confidential information. All rights reserved
* except as may be permitted by prior written consent.
*
* $Id: xxx_err.h,v 1.10 2001/07/26 18:48:34 zzzz $
... (1 Reply)
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need a sed line that will find all lines that contain "<int key="NSWindowStyleMask">" and then replace the entire line (not just that one string) with "<int key="NSWindowStyleMask">8223</int>". It doesn't necessarily have to use sed as long as it gets the job done :)
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some lines
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more lines here
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1
2
3
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Everyone,
# cat 3
a
b
# cat 4
a
b
# perl -p -i -e "s/.*/c/ if $.==2" *
# cat 3
a
c
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a
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i have something like this...
cat filename.txt
<complexType name="abc">
bklah vlah
blah
blha blha blah
blha
</complexType >
<complexType name="def">
bklah vlah
blah
blha blha blah
blha
</complexType >
.
.
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Hi,
i want to replace
"Hi How
are You when
did you go to
delhi"
to
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are you when
did you come from
delhi"
in a file.
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Hi All,
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<this is not starting of file>
record
line1
line2
line3
end
line4
line5
record
line6
line7
line8
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cat
dog
boy
girl
mouse
house
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football
hockey
Replace_Flag
baseball
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#Start Perms
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PASTE(1) BSD General Commands Manual PASTE(1)
NAME
paste -- merge corresponding or subsequent lines of files
SYNOPSIS
paste [-s] [-d list] file ...
DESCRIPTION
The paste utility concatenates the corresponding lines of the given input files, replacing all but the last file's newline characters with a
single tab character, and writes the resulting lines to standard output. If end-of-file is reached on an input file while other input files
still contain data, the file is treated as if it were an endless source of empty lines.
The options are as follows:
-d list Use one or more of the provided characters to replace the newline characters instead of the default tab. The characters in list
are used circularly, i.e., when list is exhausted the first character from list is reused. This continues until a line from the
last input file (in default operation) or the last line in each file (using the -s option) is displayed, at which time paste
begins selecting characters from the beginning of list again.
The following special characters can also be used in list:
newline character
tab character
\ backslash character
Empty string (not a null character).
Any other character preceded by a backslash is equivalent to the character itself.
-s Concatenate all of the lines of each separate input file in command line order. The newline character of every line except the
last line in each input file is replaced with the tab character, unless otherwise specified by the -d option.
If '-' is specified for one or more of the input files, the standard input is used; standard input is read one line at a time, circularly,
for each instance of '-'.
The paste utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
cut(1)
STANDARDS
The paste utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
BSD
June 6, 1993 BSD