Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: how to find null column
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting how to find null column Post 302473632 by ken002 on Sunday 21st of November 2010 11:32:58 PM
Old 11-22-2010
how to find null column

Hi, everyone
I have a requirement as following:
source file
1, abc, def, caaa
2, , cde, aaa
3, bcd, , adefefg
I need find columns which contains null value, in above example,
I need get two rows
2, , cde, aaa
3, bcd, , adefefg
anybody has idea how to achive this

thanks in advance
ken002
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to check Null values in a file column by column if columns are Not NULLs

Hi All, I have a table with 10 columns. Some columns(2nd,4th,5th,7th,8th and 10th) are Not Null columns. I'll get a tab-delimited file and want to check col by col and generate seperate error code for each col eg:102 if 2nd col value is NULL and 104 if 4th col value is NULL so on... I am a... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mandab
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Check for null values in a column

Hi All, I have a file with 10 columns and get the required data for nine columns properly except 8th. In 8th column i have both NULL and NON NULL values...i.e certain records have values for all the columns including 8th column and certain records have 8th column as NULL.My requisite is,without... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: ganesh_248
20 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find and replace a column that has '' to NULL in a comma delimited using awk or sed

Hi this is my first time posting ever. I'm relatively new in using AWK/SED, I've been trying many a solution. I'm trying to replace the 59th column in a file where if I encounter '' then I would like to replace it with the word NULL. example 0 , '' , '' , 0 , 195.538462 change it to 0... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gumal901
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Remove null in certain column

Hi, gurus, I need remove lines in a file which contains null value in certain column eg. 123, ,abc,def,cde 234,abc,cde,def 456,cde, ,bcd in this file I need remove lines which second column contains null. expected result: 234,abc,cde,def 456,cde, ,bcd :wall: Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ken002
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check null values column

hi, I had a small question.I had a file from which i need to extract data. I have written the below script to check if the file exists and if it exists extract requierd columns from the file. IFILE=/home/home01/Report_1.csv OFILE=/home/home01/name.csv.out1 if #Checks if file exists... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vivekit82
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find null column?

hi Gurus, I need find the null column in a file. my file like below abc, ,cde,def abc,ded,cdd,def abc, ,ddd,ccd aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd basic, I need to find the lines which second column is null Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ken6503
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace Null with 0 in 6th column in file

Hi Forum. I tried to search for the solution online but I couldn't find specifically what I'm trying to achieve. I want to replace Null with 0 in column position#6; Any other values would be retained. Before: 52653363|3407732947|28-MAR-2014... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pchang
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Finding null column value using array

hi, Am trying to find a solution for finding a null column value inside a loop using array. for eg: two three five From the above array myarray,myarray and myarray having null values. But when am trying to check that space using some condition its not working. for (( i=0;... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rogerben
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Getting the lines with nth column non-null

Hi, I have a huge list of archives (.gz). Each archive is about 40MB. A file is generated every minute so if I want to analyze the data for 1 hour I get already 60 files for example. These are text files, ';' separated, each line having about 300 fields (columns). What I need to do is to... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nenad
11 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Divide the value of the column if not NULL.

File 1 --------- N_ACCT,CARD_TYPE,CARD_BAL,CUST_CODE --------------------------------------------------- 0301,38,0.00,10 0319,38,54422.92,10 0392,38,0.00,10 0418,38,35254.87,10 0442,38,0.00,10 0491,38,0.00,10 0558,38,45988.76,10 0616,38,0.00,10 0665,38,0.00,10 0699,38,0.00,10 File 2... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh_target
3 Replies
funjoin(1)							SAORD Documentation							funjoin(1)

NAME
funjoin - join two or more FITS binary tables on specified columns SYNOPSIS
funjoin [switches] <ifile1> <ifile2> ... <ifilen> <ofile> OPTIONS
-a cols # columns to activate in all files -a1 cols ... an cols # columns to activate in each file -b 'c1:bvl,c2:bv2' # blank values for common columns in all files -bn 'c1:bv1,c2:bv2' # blank values for columns in specific files -j col # column to join in all files -j1 col ... jn col # column to join in each file -m min # min matches to output a row -M max # max matches to output a row -s # add 'jfiles' status column -S col # add col as status column -t tol # tolerance for joining numeric cols [2 files only] DESCRIPTION
funjoin joins rows from two or more (up to 32) FITS Binary Table files, based on the values of specified join columns in each file. NB: the join columns must have an index file associated with it. These files are generated using the funindex program. The first argument to the program specifies the first input FITS table or raw event file. If "stdin" is specified, data are read from the standard input. Subsequent arguments specify additional event files and tables to join. The last argument is the output FITS file. NB: Do not use Funtools Bracket Notation to specify FITS extensions and row filters when running funjoin or you will get wrong results. Rows are accessed and joined using the index files directly, and this bypasses all filtering. The join columns are specified using the -j col switch (which specifies a column name to use for all files) or with -j1 col1, -j2 col2, ... -jn coln switches (which specify a column name to use for each file). A join column must be specified for each file. If both -j col and -jn coln are specified for a given file, then the latter is used. Join columns must either be of type string or type numeric; it is illegal to mix numeric and string columns in a given join. For example, to join three files using the same key column for each file, use: funjoin -j key in1.fits in2.fits in3.fits out.fits A different key can be specified for the third file in this way: funjoin -j key -j3 otherkey in1.fits in2.fits in3.fits out.fits The -a "cols" switch (and -a1 "col1", -a2 "cols2" counterparts) can be used to specify columns to activate (i.e. write to the output file) for each input file. By default, all columns are output. If two or more columns from separate files have the same name, the second (and subsequent) columns are renamed to have an underscore and a numeric value appended. The -m min and -M max switches specify the minimum and maximum number of joins required to write out a row. The default minimum is 0 joins (i.e. all rows are written out) and the default maximum is 63 (the maximum number of possible joins with a limit of 32 input files). For example, to write out only those rows in which exactly two files have columns that match (i.e. one join): funjoin -j key -m 1 -M 1 in1.fits in2.fits in3.fits ... out.fits A given row can have the requisite number of joins without all of the files being joined (e.g. three files are being joined but only two have a given join key value). In this case, all of the columns of the non-joined file are written out, by default, using blanks (zeros or NULLs). The -b c1:bv1,c2:bv2 and -b1 'c1:bv1,c2:bv2' -b2 'c1:bv1,c2 - bv2' ... switches can be used to set the blank value for columns common to all files and/or columns in a specified file, respectively. Each blank value string contains a comma-separated list of col- umn:blank_val specifiers. For floating point values (single or double), a case-insensitive string value of "nan" means that the IEEE NaN (not-a-number) should be used. Thus, for example: funjoin -b "AKEY:???" -b1 "A:-1" -b3 "G:NaN,E:-1,F:-100" ... means that a non-joined AKEY column in any file will contain the string "???", the non-joined A column of file 1 will contain a value of -1, the non-joined G column of file 3 will contain IEEE NaNs, while the non-joined E and F columns of the same file will contain values -1 and -100, respectively. Of course, where common and specific blank values are specified for the same column, the specific blank value is used. To distinguish which files are non-blank components of a given row, the -s (status) switch can be used to add a bitmask column named "JFILES" to the output file. In this column, a bit is set for each non-blank file composing the given row, with bit 0 corresponds to the first file, bit 1 to the second file, and so on. The file names themselves are stored in the FITS header as parameters named JFILE1, JFILE2, etc. The -S col switch allows you to change the name of the status column from the default "JFILES". A join between rows is the Cartesian product of all rows in one file having a given join column value with all rows in a second file having the same value for its join column and so on. Thus, if file1 has 2 rows with join column value 100, file2 has 3 rows with the same value, and file3 has 4 rows, then the join results in 2*3*4=24 rows being output. The join algorithm directly processes the index file associated with the join column of each file. The smallest value of all the current columns is selected as a base, and this value is used to join equal-valued columns in the other files. In this way, the index files are traversed exactly once. The -t tol switch specifies a tolerance value for numeric columns. At present, a tolerance value can join only two files at a time. (A completely different algorithm is required to join more than two files using a tolerance, somethng we might consider implementing in the future.) The following example shows many of the features of funjoin. The input files t1.fits, t2.fits, and t3.fits contain the following columns: [sh] fundisp t1.fits AKEY KEY A B ----------- ------ ------ ------ aaa 0 0 1 bbb 1 3 4 ccc 2 6 7 ddd 3 9 10 eee 4 12 13 fff 5 15 16 ggg 6 18 19 hhh 7 21 22 fundisp t2.fits AKEY KEY C D ----------- ------ ------ ------ iii 8 24 25 ggg 6 18 19 eee 4 12 13 ccc 2 6 7 aaa 0 0 1 fundisp t3.fits AKEY KEY E F G ------------ ------ -------- -------- ----------- ggg 6 18 19 100.10 jjj 9 27 28 200.20 aaa 0 0 1 300.30 ddd 3 9 10 400.40 Given these input files, the following funjoin command: funjoin -s -a1 "-B" -a2 "-D" -a3 "-E" -b "AKEY:???" -b1 "AKEY:XXX,A:255" -b3 "G:NaN,E:-1,F:-100" -j key t1.fits t2.fits t3.fits foo.fits will join the files on the KEY column, outputting all columns except B (in t1.fits), D (in t2.fits) and E (in t3.fits), and setting blank values for AKEY (globally, but overridden for t1.fits) and A (in file 1) and G, E, and F (in file 3). A JFILES column will be output to flag which files were used in each row: AKEY KEY A AKEY_2 KEY_2 C AKEY_3 KEY_3 F G JFILES ------------ ------ ------ ------------ ------ ------ ------------ ------ -------- ----------- -------- aaa 0 0 aaa 0 0 aaa 0 1 300.30 7 bbb 1 3 ??? 0 0 ??? 0 -100 nan 1 ccc 2 6 ccc 2 6 ??? 0 -100 nan 3 ddd 3 9 ??? 0 0 ddd 3 10 400.40 5 eee 4 12 eee 4 12 ??? 0 -100 nan 3 fff 5 15 ??? 0 0 ??? 0 -100 nan 1 ggg 6 18 ggg 6 18 ggg 6 19 100.10 7 hhh 7 21 ??? 0 0 ??? 0 -100 nan 1 XXX 0 255 iii 8 24 ??? 0 -100 nan 2 XXX 0 255 ??? 0 0 jjj 9 28 200.20 4 SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funjoin(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:42 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy