I used the following script
cd pathname
for y in `ls *`;
do sed "s/ABCD/DCBA/g" $y > temp; mv temp $y;
done
and it worked fine for finding and replacing strings with names etc. in all files of the given path.
I'm trying to replace a string which consists of path (location of file)
... (2 Replies)
I used the following script
cd pathname
for y in `ls *`;
do sed "s/ABCD/DCBA/g" $y > temp; mv temp $y;
done
and it worked fine for finding and replacing strings with names etc. in all files of the given path.
I'm trying to replace a string which consists of path (location of file)
... (11 Replies)
Hi,
filenames:
contains name of list of files to search in.
placelist
contains the names of places to be searched in all files in "filenames"
for i in $(<filenames)
do
egrep -f placelist $i
if ]
then
echo $i
fi
done >> outputfile
Output i am getting: (0 Replies)
find . -type f -name "*.sql" -print|xargs perl -i -pe 's/pattern/replaced/g'
this is simple logic to find and replace in multiple files & folders
Hope this helps.
Thanks
Zaheer (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to script and I want find one string from multiple files in diff directories and put that out put to new file.
Like I have A,B & C directories and each has multiple files but one file is unic in all the directories like COMM.txt
Now I want write script to find the string... (8 Replies)
Hello friends,
Plz suggest the find command,
How to search a string in a paticular string in miltiple files with current dirctory.:)
Thanks in advance.
Siva Ranganath Ch (2 Replies)
I'm trying to create what (should be) a simple bash script that will pull computer name and use that info to bind to one of three servers. Is there any way to do this without having a text file with the names of the servers and associated computer names? (5 Replies)
Hey guys. I know pratically 0 about Linux, so could anyone please give me instructions on how to accomplish this ?
The distro is RedHat 4.1.2 and i need to find and replace a multiple lines string in several php files across subdirectories.
So lets say im at root/dir1/dir2/ , when i execute... (12 Replies)
Hello all,
I have a directory with 2000+ files. I need to look in each file for an invoice number. To identify this, i can search for the string 'BIG' and then retrieve the next 30 characters. I was thinking awk for this, but not sure how to do it. Each file contains one long string and in... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: jdinero
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
indxbib
lookbib(1) General Commands Manual lookbib(1)Name
indxbib, lookbib - build inverted index for a bibliography, lookup bibliographic references
Syntax
indxbib database...
lookbib database
Description
The makes an inverted index to the named databases (or files) for use by and These files contain bibliographic references (or other kinds
of information) separated by blank lines.
A bibliographic reference is a set of lines, constituting fields of bibliographic information. Each field starts on a line beginning with
a ``%'', followed by a key-letter, then a blank, and finally the contents of the field, which may continue until the next line starting
with ``%''.
The command is a shell script that calls and The first program, truncates words to 6 characters, and maps upper case to lower case. It
also discards words shorter than 3 characters, words among the 100 most common English words, and numbers (dates) < 1900 or > 2000. These
parameters can be changed. The second program, inv, creates an entry file (.ia), a posting file (.ib), and a tag file (.ic), all in the
working directory.
The command uses an inverted index made by to find sets of bibliographic references. It reads keywords typed after the ``>'' prompt on the
terminal, and retrieves records containing all these keywords. If nothing matches, nothing is returned except another ``>'' prompt.
It is possible to search multiple databases, as long as they have a common index made by In that case, only the first argument given to is
specified to
If does not find the index files (the .i[abc] files), it looks for a reference file with the same name as the argument, without the suf-
fixes. It creates a file with a '.ig' suffix, suitable for use with It then uses this fgrep file to find references. This method is sim-
pler to use, but the .ig file is slower to use than the .i[abc] files, and does not allow the use of multiple reference files.
Files
x.ia, x.ib, x.ic, where x is the first argument, or if these are not present, then x.ig, x
See Alsoaddbib(1), lookbib(1), refer(1), roffbib(1), sortbib(1),
lookbib(1)