Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers find a word in a file, plus the next 6 characters? Post 302484311 by mikayla73 on Thursday 30th of December 2010 02:09:37 PM
Old 12-30-2010
THANK YOU!!

I knew that grep -o would find the word instead of the entire line, I didn't know I could use the [0-9] to get the additional characters.

Thanks again!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

find a word in a file, and change a word beneath it ??

Hi all, I have a file with lines written somewhat like this. aaaa ccc aa linux browse = no xssxw cdcedc dcsdcd csdw police dwed dwd browse = no cdecec (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikas027
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find Exact word in file

Hi ALL, I want to search one string “20 “ i.e 20 with space. But my file where I am searching this “20 “ contain some data like 120 before image file truncated 220 Reports section succeeded 20 Transaction database .prd stopped 220 Reports section completed. When I search for the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jeevan Salunke
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

find replace a pattern and following characters in a word

Suppose that I have a string "one:#red two:#yellow three:#gr'een four:#blu^e" and I want to replace the pattern :# and the following characters in the word with nothing. The output string should look "one two three four" How can I do this with sed. Some points to consider (a) the last word in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: superuser84
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find word in file then get following characters

Hello, I have several xml files from which I want to find and return a particular string I want to locate the InId="00000008". Now that is inlcuded within a tag and ofcourse the number is different every time this is what I came up with given that after greping the line that contains the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: TasosARISFC
6 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find a particular word from a file

Hello Experts, I have to count the word like "RESULT_CODE: : -6" from the multiple files names like req.result_2_vqx-71144750.log for a particular date. Lets suppose the date is 10 OCT 2011. How I can do it with a single command in Solaris environment. Reagrds Oracle User (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Oracle_User
8 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Find EXACT word in files, just the word: no prefix, no suffix, no 'similar', just the word

I have a file that has the words I want to find in other files (but lets say I just want to find my words in a single file). Those words are IDs, so if my word is ZZZ4, outputs like aaZZZ4, ZZZ4bb, aaZZZ4bb, ZZ4, ZZZ, ZyZ4, ZZZ4.8 (or anything like that) WON'T BE USEFUL. I need the whole word... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: chicchan
6 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Find word in a large file

Hi all I am working on disallowing users to use easy passwords in pam.d setting on RHEL 5.7 and SuSe 11, and I was hoping to add more words into the current cracklib dict, so I use "echo" command to append new words into the file I dont want to add the same words into the dict, I think I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Search for the word and exporting 35 characters after that word using shell script?

I have a file input.txt which have loads of weird characters, html tags and useful materials. I want to display 35 characters after the word description excluding weird characters like $$#$#@$#@***$# and without html tags in the new file output.txt. Help me. Thanx in advance. My final goal is to... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: sachit adhikari
11 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Search for the word and exporting 35 characters after that word using shell script

I have a file input.txt which have loads of weird characters, html tags and useful materials. I want to display 35 characters after the word "description" excluding weird characters like $&lmp and without html tags in the new file output.txt. Help me. Thanx in advance. I have attached the input... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sachit adhikari
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Count characters in a csv file and add an word.

Hello, I want to add a sentence to "post column" those who are only less than 30 characters.Thank you very much for your help. "category","title","post" "Z","Zoo","test 54325 test 45363mc." "Z","Zen","rs2w3rsj 2d342dg 2d3s4f23 d23423s23h 2s34s2423g ds232d34 2342." "Z","Zet","test4444... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hoo
3 Replies
Tcl(n)							       Tcl Built-In Commands							    Tcl(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
Tcl - Tool Command Language SYNOPSIS
Summary of Tcl language syntax. _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The following rules define the syntax and semantics of the Tcl language: [1] Commands. A Tcl script is a string containing one or more commands. Semi-colons and newlines are command separators unless quoted as described below. Close brackets are command terminators during command substitution (see below) unless quoted. [2] Evaluation. A command is evaluated in two steps. First, the Tcl interpreter breaks the command into words and performs substitutions as described below. These substitutions are performed in the same way for all commands. The first word is used to locate a command procedure to carry out the command, then all of the words of the command are passed to the command procedure. The command procedure is free to interpret each of its words in any way it likes, such as an integer, variable name, list, or Tcl script. Different com- mands interpret their words differently. [3] Words. Words of a command are separated by white space (except for newlines, which are command separators). [4] Double quotes. If the first character of a word is double-quote (``"'') then the word is terminated by the next double-quote character. If semi- colons, close brackets, or white space characters (including newlines) appear between the quotes then they are treated as ordinary characters and included in the word. Command substitution, variable substitution, and backslash substitution are performed on the characters between the quotes as described below. The double-quotes are not retained as part of the word. [5] Braces. If the first character of a word is an open brace (``{'') then the word is terminated by the matching close brace (``}''). Braces nest within the word: for each additional open brace there must be an additional close brace (however, if an open brace or close brace within the word is quoted with a backslash then it is not counted in locating the matching close brace). No substitutions are performed on the characters between the braces except for backslash-newline substitutions described below, nor do semi-colons, new- lines, close brackets, or white space receive any special interpretation. The word will consist of exactly the characters between the outer braces, not including the braces themselves. [6] Command substitution. If a word contains an open bracket (``['') then Tcl performs command substitution. To do this it invokes the Tcl interpreter recur- sively to process the characters following the open bracket as a Tcl script. The script may contain any number of commands and must be terminated by a close bracket (``]''). The result of the script (i.e. the result of its last command) is substituted into the word in place of the brackets and all of the characters between them. There may be any number of command substitutions in a single word. Command substitution is not performed on words enclosed in braces. [7] Variable substitution. If a word contains a dollar-sign (``$'') then Tcl performs variable substitution: the dollar-sign and the following characters are replaced in the word by the value of a variable. Variable substitution may take any of the following forms: $name Name is the name of a scalar variable; the name is a sequence of one or more characters that are a letter, digit, underscore, or namespace separators (two or more colons). $name(index) Name gives the name of an array variable and index gives the name of an element within that array. Name must contain only letters, digits, underscores, and namespace separators, and may be an empty string. Command substitutions, variable substitutions, and backslash substitutions are performed on the characters of index. ${name} Name is the name of a scalar variable. It may contain any characters whatsoever except for close braces. There may be any number of variable substitutions in a single word. Variable substitution is not performed on words enclosed in braces. [8] Backslash substitution. If a backslash (``'') appears within a word then backslash substitution occurs. In all cases but those described below the back- slash is dropped and the following character is treated as an ordinary character and included in the word. This allows characters such as double quotes, close brackets, and dollar signs to be included in words without triggering special processing. The follow- ing table lists the backslash sequences that are handled specially, along with the value that replaces each sequence. a Audible alert (bell) (0x7).  Backspace (0x8). f Form feed (0xc). Newline (0xa). Carriage-return (0xd). Tab (0x9). v Vertical tab (0xb). <newline>whiteSpace A single space character replaces the backslash, newline, and all spaces and tabs after the newline. This backslash sequence is unique in that it is replaced in a separate pre-pass before the command is actually parsed. This means that it will be replaced even when it occurs between braces, and the resulting space will be treated as a word separator if it isn't in braces or quotes. \ Backslash (``''). ooo | The digits ooo (one, two, or three of them) give an eight-bit octal value for the Unicode character that will be inserted. | The upper bits of the Unicode character will be 0. | xhh | The hexadecimal digits hh give an eight-bit hexadecimal value for the Unicode character that will be inserted. Any number of | hexadecimal digits may be present; however, all but the last two are ignored (the result is always a one-byte quantity). The | upper bits of the Unicode character will be 0. | uhhhh | The hexadecimal digits hhhh (one, two, three, or four of them) give a sixteen-bit hexadecimal value for the Unicode character | that will be inserted. Backslash substitution is not performed on words enclosed in braces, except for backslash-newline as described above. [9] Comments. If a hash character (``#'') appears at a point where Tcl is expecting the first character of the first word of a command, then the hash character and the characters that follow it, up through the next newline, are treated as a comment and ignored. The comment character only has significance when it appears at the beginning of a command. [10] Order of substitution. Each character is processed exactly once by the Tcl interpreter as part of creating the words of a command. For example, if vari- able substitution occurs then no further substitutions are performed on the value of the variable; the value is inserted into the word verbatim. If command substitution occurs then the nested command is processed entirely by the recursive call to the Tcl inter- preter; no substitutions are performed before making the recursive call and no additional substitutions are performed on the result of the nested script. Substitutions take place from left to right, and each substitution is evaluated completely before attempting to evaluate the next. Thus, a sequence like set y [set x 0][incr x][incr x] will always set the variable y to the value, 012. [11] Substitution and word boundaries. Substitutions do not affect the word boundaries of a command. For example, during variable substitution the entire value of the variable becomes part of a single word, even if the variable's value contains spaces. Tcl 8.1 Tcl(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:38 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy