please help:
I want to add 1 space between string and numbers:
input file:
abcd12345
output file:
abcd 1234
The following sed command does not work:
sed 's/\(+\)\(+\)/\1 \2/' file
Any ideas, please
Andy (2 Replies)
Hey guys, I have a file that I've slowly been awking, seding, and greping for data entry. I am down to pull the addresses out to insert them into an excel file. Each address is a few lines, but i want to put a semicolon delimiter in between each address so I can export the text file into excel and... (6 Replies)
I have lines in a file like this (140,000+ entries):
value1,
value2,
value3,
"
"
I want to concatenate the three (there are 22) lines with commas so it looks like this
value1, value2, value3
"
"
I'm trying with
:g/,$/s/,$/, /g
but that is not flying.
any ideas? (6 Replies)
exmaple, i need to replace the number "5" from all lines below with "X"?
What is the useful vim command that i can apply for..
ddpadsgg506xghssuyj
ddpadsgag546xghssuys
ddsadsgaag596xghssuy_te
ddsadsgag506xghssuy_pe
ddsadsgagc526xghssuys
ddsads506ighssuys
ddsadsgag506pghssuyk (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am not that good with reg exp and sed. But I was just looking at something the other day and came across a situation.
When I ran the below command:
echo "123 word" | sed 's/*/(&)/'
the op was:
(123) word
But when I ran:
echo "123 word" | sed 's/*/(&)/g'
the o/p was:
(123)... (4 Replies)
Dear all
i have the code which print 1 line of context before and after regexp, with line number
sed -n -e '/regexp/{=;x;1!p;g;$!N;p;D;}' -e h
the code work well but any one can tell me what each letter mean {=;x;1!p;g;$!N;p;D;}
also how i can print 2 line before and onle line after ... (2 Replies)
Hi!
I have a difficult problem, to step up a unknown version number in a text file, and save the file. It would be great to run script.sh and the version gets increased.
Example the content of the textfile.txt
hello
version = x
bye
This include three steps
1. First find the char after... (2 Replies)
hello,
I want to replace awk with a perl one liner in unix.
i use in awk REGEX and FS ( field separator) because
awk syntaxes in different unix os versions have not the same behaviour.
Awk, Nawk and GNU Awk Cheat Sheet - good coders code, great reuse
i have a file named "file" and want... (5 Replies)
Hi everyone, I would really appreciate any help I could get on the following topic.
I am not very familiar with reg expressions nor with sed, I just know the basic uses. What I am trying to do is the following: I have a huge text file where I would like to replace all occurnces of a certain... (13 Replies)
Trying to find and replace one string with another string in a file
#!/usr/bin/perl
$csd_table_path = "/file.ntab";
$find_str = '--bundle_type=021';
$repl_str = '--bundle_type=021 --target=/dev/disk1s2';
if( system("/usr/bin/perl -p -i -e 's/$find_str/$repl_str/' $csd_table_path")... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cillmor
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
strtok_r
STRTOK(3) Linux Programmer's Manual STRTOK(3)NAME
strtok, strtok_r - extract tokens from strings
SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h>
char *strtok(char *str, const char *delim);
char *strtok_r(char *str, const char *delim, char **saveptr);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
strtok_r(): _SVID_SOURCE || _BSD_SOURCE || _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 1 || _XOPEN_SOURCE || _POSIX_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
The strtok() function breaks a string into a sequence of zero or more nonempty tokens. On the first call to strtok() the string to be
parsed should be specified in str. In each subsequent call that should parse the same string, str must be NULL.
The delim argument specifies a set of bytes that delimit the tokens in the parsed string. The caller may specify different strings in
delim in successive calls that parse the same string.
Each call to strtok() returns a pointer to a null-terminated string containing the next token. This string does not include the delimiting
byte. If no more tokens are found, strtok() returns NULL.
A sequence of calls to strtok() that operate on the same string maintains a pointer that determines the point from which to start searching
for the next token. The first call to strtok() sets this pointer to point to the first byte of the string. The start of the next token is
determined by scanning forward for the next nondelimiter byte in str. If such a byte is found, it is taken as the start of the next token.
If no such byte is found, then there are no more tokens, and strtok() returns NULL. (A string that is empty or that contains only delim-
iters will thus cause strtok() to return NULL on the first call.)
The end of each token is found by scanning forward until either the next delimiter byte is found or until the terminating null byte ('