10-21-2010
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I have the following requirement. i have the following line from a log file
one : two : Three : four : five : six : seven : eight :nine :ten
Now can you pls help what i should do to get only the following output from the above line
two : five : six : seven : Eight
appreciate your... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vin_eme
3 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I am trying to write a bash shell script that does the following:
1.Finds all *.txt files within my directory of interest
2. reads each of the files (25 files) one by one (tab-delimited format and have the same data format)
3. skips the first 10 rows of the file
4. extracts and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manishabh
4 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
hello,
I will would be grateful if anyone can help me reply to my post
extract multiple cloumns from multiple files; skip rows and include filenames; awk
Please see this thread.
Thanks
manishabh (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: manishabh
0 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
The following lines are taken from a long paragraph:
Labels of output orbitals: RY* RY* RY* RY* RY* RY*
1\1\GINC-COMPUTE-1-3\SP\UB3LYP\6-31G\C2H5Cr1O1(1+,5)\LIUZHEN\19-Jan-20
10\0\\# ub3lyp/6-31G pop=(nbo,savenbo) gfprint\\E101GECP\\1,5\O,0,-1.7
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: liuzhencc
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need help to split lines from a file into multiple files.
my input look like this:
13
23 45 45 6 7
33 44 55 66 7
13
34 5 6 7 87
45 7 8 8 9
13
44 55 66 77 8
44 66 88 99 6
I want to split every 3 lines from this file to be written to individual files. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: saint2006
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I'm using AWK to try to extract data from multiple files (*.txt). The script should look for a flag that occurs at a specific position in each file and it should return the data to the right of that flag.
I should end up with one line for each file, each containing 3 columns:... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Liverpaul09
8 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I'd like to process multiple files. For example:
file1.txt
file2.txt
file3.txt
Each file contains several lines of data. I want to extract a piece of data and output it to a new file.
file1.txt ----> newfile1.txt
file2.txt ----> newfile2.txt
file3.txt ----> newfile3.txt
Here is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Liverpaul09
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have this code
awk 'NR==FNR{a=$1;next} a' file1 file2
which does what I need it to do, but for only two files. I want to make it so that I can have multiple files (for example 30) and the code will return only the items that are in every single one of those files and ignore the ones... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: castrojc
7 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello
I have an output that has a string between quotes and another between square brackets on the same line. I need to extract these 2 strings Example line
Device "nrst3a" attributes=(0x4) RAW SERIAL_NUMBER=SNL2
Output should look like
nrst3a VD073AV1443BVW00083
I was trying with sed... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bombcan
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Greetings experts,
Have 2 input files, of which 1 file has 1 record per line; in 2nd file, multiple lines constitute 1 record; Hence declared the RS=";"
Now in the first file which ends with ";" at each line of the line; But \nis also being considered as part of the data due to which
I am... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: chill3chee
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
pcregrep
PCREGREP(1) General Commands Manual PCREGREP(1)
NAME
pcregrep - a grep with Perl-compatible regular expressions.
SYNOPSIS
pcregrep [-Vcfhilnrsvx] pattern [file] ...
DESCRIPTION
pcregrep searches files for character patterns, in the same way as other grep commands do, but it uses the PCRE regular expression library
to support patterns that are compatible with the regular expressions of Perl 5. See pcre(3) for a full description of syntax and semantics.
If no files are specified, pcregrep reads the standard input. By default, each line that matches the pattern is copied to the standard out-
put, and if there is more than one file, the file name is printed before each line of output. However, there are options that can change
how pcregrep behaves.
Lines are limited to BUFSIZ characters. BUFSIZ is defined in <stdio.h>. The newline character is removed from the end of each line before
it is matched against the pattern.
OPTIONS
-V Write the version number of the PCRE library being used to the standard error stream.
-c Do not print individual lines; instead just print a count of the number of lines that would otherwise have been printed. If sev-
eral files are given, a count is printed for each of them.
-ffilename
Read patterns from the file, one per line, and match all patterns against each line. There is a maximum of 100 patterns. Trailing
white space is removed, and blank lines are ignored. An empty file contains no patterns and therefore matches nothing.
-h Suppress printing of filenames when searching multiple files.
-i Ignore upper/lower case distinctions during comparisons.
-l Instead of printing lines from the files, just print the names of the files containing lines that would have been printed. Each
file name is printed once, on a separate line.
-n Precede each line by its line number in the file.
-r If any file is a directory, recursively scan the files it contains. Without -r a directory is scanned as a normal file.
-s Work silently, that is, display nothing except error messages. The exit status indicates whether any matches were found.
-v Invert the sense of the match, so that lines which do not match the pattern are now the ones that are found.
-x Force the pattern to be anchored (it must start matching at the beginning of the line) and in addition, require it to match the
entire line. This is equivalent to having ^ and $ characters at the start and end of each alternative branch in the regular
expression.
SEE ALSO
pcre(3), Perl 5 documentation
DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 if any matches were found, 1 if no matches were found, and 2 for syntax errors or inacessible files (even if matches were
found).
AUTHOR
Philip Hazel <ph10@cam.ac.uk>
Last updated: 15 August 2001
Copyright (c) 1997-2001 University of Cambridge.
PCREGREP(1)