Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Accepting A-Za-Z
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Accepting A-Za-Z Post 302462664 by puttster on Thursday 14th of October 2010 05:59:48 PM
Old 10-14-2010
Why is it that when I take data and store it in a variable with grep, that it creates a space after every single piece of data except for the first chunk?
For example,

my output is
400
500
600
700
800
900
I store 400 500 600 700 800 900 in A by doing

A=`(i used grep to single out this set of data )|head -6|awk '{print $6}'`
( $6 is the 6th column within my data set )
I echo $a

and only 900 is shown in A, however.... if I do -5 it->( outputs 800 ) or -4 it ->( outputs 700 ) -3 it ->( outputs 600 ).... why is that?



Also

My numbers do have something in front of them Than I cannot explain...
I can only get my code to work with the FIRST line ( 100 )and the first line has no spaces or anything in front of it.
Further explanation...

NOSPACESHERE100
_200
_300
_400
_500
etc...
there are spaces before 200 300 400 500 which are making this stressful... are they carriage returns...tabs?

Last edited by puttster; 10-14-2010 at 07:12 PM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Accepting User Input

I'm just starting out with UNIX and have figured some stuff out. I just need some help with accepting user input on the command line. For instance, I created a number counter that counts down from any positive hard coded number. But, I want the commnad line line to read "Countdown 20" where 20... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: scott78
1 Replies

2. HP-UX

Oracle not accepting new connections

Hi UNIX guru's, Have recently upgraded Oracle from 8i to 10g on an HP-UX (RISC) 11.11 box. At least twice a day the database stops accepting incoming connections and the following errors are observed in the various logs. The box needs to be rebooted to get everything going again. The... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mat_cottrell
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Not able to display the value I am accepting as an argument

Hi, I am new to UNIX. I am facing some problem here. #! /usr/bin/ksh currDate = $1 export currDate; echo " Date is $currDate" when I run this script, it says : currDate not found. Can anybody point out the mistake please. --mahek (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahek_bedi
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

accepting input date

I how do i accept a input date in script which is lesser than a specified day? ex: to accept a date less than or equal to 100 days(from today).?:( Thanks for the help in advance.:) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: abhi_123
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

reg accepting password

Hi, I want to login to many systems and password should be taken automatically from a file(login is working but password is not accepting). Any help on this is appreciable . My code. for i in `cat /tmp/tes ` ====>tes file contain list of hosts > do ssh $i > perl prog.pl >... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rogerben
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with Accepting Directories as an Argument

I'm doing a script where you are suppose to start off in accepting one or more directory as an argument. How do i do this? Sorry for the nub question. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: LinuxUser232331
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Accepting Input regardless of Case

Hi I am trying to get my script to accept input regardless if the person enters a or A. here is the portion of the code where I get the input. echo -n 'Please enter your choice:' # prompt user for input. read reply # read input echo case $reply in #... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: DualPandas
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

accepting passwords in shell programming

how do i accept a password like input through keyboard using shell script? i dont know the command for doing so. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kz2013
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

script accepting password

Hi friends, I am very new to Unix scripting and having some difficulty in my first shell script. I have written a simple shell script to upload an artifact to a remote machine on the network. echo "Uploading the artifact" scp app.war username@remotemochine.domainname.net:/home/deployables... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: prashdeep
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Parameter not accepting in awk

In below script parameterwhich i am passing to awk function is not working.Not sure why its not accepting parameter.Please tell me how to pass parameter to the awk function.Please check the below script. #!/bin/ksh dummy_file=/etlapps/dev/data/sub_servicer_data/ScriptLogs/emp.txt fields=5... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: katakamvivek
2 Replies
ogrinfo(1)						      General Commands Manual							ogrinfo(1)

NAME
ogrinfo - ogrinfo lists information about an OGR supported data source SYNOPSIS
ogrinfo [--help-general] [-ro] [-q] [-where restricted_where] [-spat xmin ymin xmax ymax] [-fid fid] [-sql statement] [-dialect dialect] [-al] [-so] [-fields={YES/NO}] [-geom={YES/NO/SUMMARY}][--formats] datasource_name [layer [layer ...]].fi DESCRIPTION
The ogrinfo program lists various information about an OGR supported data source to stdout (the terminal). -ro: Open the data source in read-only mode. -al: List all features of all layers (used instead of having to give layer names as arguments). -so: Summary Only: supress listing of features, show only the summary information like projection, schema, feature count and extents. -q: Quiet verbose reporting of various information, including coordinate system, layer schema, extents, and feature count. -where restricted_where: An attribute query in a restricted form of the queries used in the SQL WHERE statement. Only features matching the attribute query will be reported. -sql statement: Execute the indicated SQL statement and return the result. -dialect dialect: SQL dialect. In some cases can be used to use (unoptimized) OGR SQL instead of the native SQL of an RDBMS by passing OGRSQL. -spat xmin ymin xmax ymax: The area of interest. Only features within the rectangle will be reported. -fid fid: If provided, only the feature with this feature id will be reported. Operates exclusive of the spatial or attribute queries. Note: if you want to select several features based on their feature id, you can also use the fact the 'fid' is a special field recognized by OGR SQL. So, '-where 'fid in (1,3,5)'' would select features 1, 3 and 5. -fields={YES/NO}: (starting with GDAL 1.6.0) If set to NO, the feature dump will not display field values. Default value is YES. -geom={YES/NO/SUMMARY}: (starting with GDAL 1.6.0) If set to NO, the feature dump will not display the geometry. If set to SUMMARY, only a summary of the geometry will be displayed. If set to YES, the geometry will be reported in full OGC WKT format. Default value is YES. --formats: List the format drivers that are enabled. datasource_name: The data source to open. May be a filename, directory or other virtual name. See the OGR Vector Formats list for supported datasources. layer: One or more layer names may be reported. If no layer names are passed then ogrinfo will report a list of available layers (and their layerwide geometry type). If layer name(s) are given then their extents, coordinate system, feature count, geometry type, schema and all features matching query parameters will be reported to the terminal. If no query parameters are provided, all features are reported. Geometries are reported in OGC WKT format. EXAMPLE
Example reporting all layers in an NTF file: % ogrinfo wrk/SHETLAND_ISLANDS.NTF INFO: Open of `wrk/SHETLAND_ISLANDS.NTF' using driver `UK .NTF' successful. 1: BL2000_LINK (Line String) 2: BL2000_POLY (None) 3: BL2000_COLLECTIONS (None) 4: FEATURE_CLASSES (None) Example using an attribute query is used to restrict the output of the features in a layer: % ogrinfo -ro -where 'GLOBAL_LINK_ID=185878' wrk/SHETLAND_ISLANDS.NTF BL2000_LINK INFO: Open of `wrk/SHETLAND_ISLANDS.NTF' using driver `UK .NTF' successful. Layer name: BL2000_LINK Geometry: Line String Feature Count: 1 Extent: (419794.100000, 1069031.000000) - (419927.900000, 1069153.500000) Layer SRS WKT: PROJCS["OSGB 1936 / British National Grid", GEOGCS["OSGB 1936", DATUM["OSGB_1936", SPHEROID["Airy 1830",6377563.396,299.3249646]], PRIMEM["Greenwich",0], UNIT["degree",0.0174532925199433]], PROJECTION["Transverse_Mercator"], PARAMETER["latitude_of_origin",49], PARAMETER["central_meridian",-2], PARAMETER["scale_factor",0.999601272], PARAMETER["false_easting",400000], PARAMETER["false_northing",-100000], UNIT["metre",1]] LINE_ID: Integer (6.0) GEOM_ID: Integer (6.0) FEAT_CODE: String (4.0) GLOBAL_LINK_ID: Integer (10.0) TILE_REF: String (10.0) OGRFeature(BL2000_LINK):2 LINE_ID (Integer) = 2 GEOM_ID (Integer) = 2 FEAT_CODE (String) = (null) GLOBAL_LINK_ID (Integer) = 185878 TILE_REF (String) = SHETLAND I LINESTRING (419832.100 1069046.300,419820.100 1069043.800,419808.300 1069048.800,419805.100 1069046.000,419805.000 1069040.600,419809.400 1069037.400,419827.400 1069035.600,419842 1069031,419859.000 1069032.800,419879.500 1069049.500,419886.700 1069061.400,419890.100 1069070.500,419890.900 1069081.800,419896.500 1069086.800,419898.400 1069092.900,419896.700 1069094.800,419892.500 1069094.300,419878.100 1069085.600,419875.400 1069087.300,419875.100 1069091.100,419872.200 1069094.600,419890.400 1069106.400,419907.600 1069112.800,419924.600 1069133.800,419927.900 1069146.300,419927.600 1069152.400,419922.600 1069153.500,419917.100 1069153.500,419911.500 1069153.000,419908.700 1069152.500,419903.400 1069150.800,419898.800 1069149.400,419894.800 1069149.300,419890.700 1069149.400,419890.600 1069149.400,419880.800 1069149.800,419876.900 1069148.900,419873.100 1069147.500,419870.200 1069146.400,419862.100 1069143.000,419860 1069142,419854.900 1069138.600,419850 1069135,419848.800 1069134.100,419843 1069130,419836.200 1069127.600,419824.600 1069123.800,419820.200 1069126.900,419815.500 1069126.900,419808.200 1069116.500,419798.700 1069117.600,419794.100 1069115.100,419796.300 1069109.100,419801.800 1069106.800,419805.000 1069107.300) AUTHORS
Frank Warmerdam warmerdam@pobox.com, Silke Reimer silke@intevation.de GDAL
Tue Sep 18 2012 ogrinfo(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:51 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy