Hello,
I am currently trying to edit an ldif file. The ldif specification states that a newline followed by a space indicates the subsequent line is a continuation of the line. So, in order to search and replace properly and edit the file, I open the file in textwrangler, search for "\r " and... (14 Replies)
Input:
--------------------------
123asd 456sdasda 789a
-------------------------
output wanted:
---------------------
123asd
456sdasda
789a
----------------------
I want this by sed in simple way
please help (I know by: tr ' ' '\n' < inputfile )I want it by sed only (5 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I have a file with content as below
aj.txt
"Iam
allfine" abcdef
abcd "all is
not well"
What I'm trying to say is my data has some new line characters in between quoted text. I must get ride of the newline character that comes in between the quoted text.
output must be:... (8 Replies)
I created a awk state to calculate the number of success however when the query runs it has a leading zero. Any ideas on how to remove the leading zero from the calculation?
Here is my query:
cat myfile.log | grep | awk '{print $2,$3,$7,$11,$15,$19,$23,$27,$31,$35($19/$15*100)}'
02:00:00... (1 Reply)
I am having a peculiar problem. First I run the code below to append 0 at the start of each line in some hundreds of files that I have in a directory. These files have each word in a newline.
for f in *.dat; do
echo "0" > tmpfile
cat $f >> tmpfile
mv tmpfile $f
done
Then I run this... (7 Replies)
Hello
I have had a requirement where I need to move data to a new line based on a text .So basically as soon as it encounters :61: it should move to a new line
Source Data :
:61:D100,74NCH1 :61:D797,50NCH2 :61:D89,38NCHK2 :61:D99,38NCHK12 :61:D79,38NCHK22 :61:D29,38NCHK5
Target Data... (11 Replies)
I'm trying to print out integers and space/newline for a nicer output, for example, every 20 integers in a row with ternary operator.
In C I could do it with:printf("%d%s",tmp_int, ((j+1)%20) ? "\t":"\n"); but could not figure out the equivalent in C++:
cout << ((j+1)%20)?... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
asa
ASA(1) BSD General Commands Manual ASA(1)NAME
asa -- interpret carriage-control characters
SYNOPSIS
asa [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The asa utility reads files sequentially, mapping FORTRAN carriage-control characters to line-printer control sequences, and writes them to
the standard output.
The first character of each line is interpreted as a carriage-control character. The following characters are interpreted as follows:
<space> Output the rest of the line without change.
0 Output a <newline> character before printing the rest of the line.
1 Output a <formfeed> character before printing the rest of the line.
+ The trailing <newline> of the previous line is replaced by a <carriage-return> before printing the rest of the line.
Lines beginning with characters other than the above are treated as if they begin with <space>.
EXIT STATUS
The asa utility exit 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
To view a file containing the output of a FORTRAN program:
asa file
To format the output of a FORTRAN program and redirect it to a line-printer:
a.out | asa | lpr
SEE ALSO f77(1)STANDARDS
The asa utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2'') and to X/Open Commands and Utilities Issue 5 (``XCU5'').
AUTHORS
J.T. Conklin, Winning Strategies, Inc.
BSD September 23, 1993 BSD