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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find time difference between two consecutive lines in same file. Post 302504222 by vilibit on Monday 14th of March 2011 04:58:56 AM
Old 03-14-2011
MySQL Problem solved

I promised to get back with results.
The danmero solution is working charmingly, although I'm not fully understand how it read previous line and compare with current one. The data from my file are several lines long and script pointed me exactly where to look for differences. Thanks again danmero, this is exactly what I need.
Although is not exactly what I intended to obtain, I tested the rbatte1 solution and after choosing h or S option I get an error:


Code:
Please enter the start time: 08:09:10
Please enter the end time: 08:09:20
Respond in hh:mm:ss or seconds? (h/S)S
The difference is: ./rba[26]: shhs=*3600: unexpected `*'
./rba[27]: ehhs=*3600: unexpected `*'
./rba[28]: smms=*60: unexpected `*'
./rba[29]: emms=*60: unexpected `*'
0

Probably becouse i use bash which i must be mentioned earlyer. Sorry.
Thanks again for your time. My problem was solved Smilie
 

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SGMLDIFF(1)															       SGMLDIFF(1)

NAME
sgmldiff - Find differences in the markup of two SGML files SYNOPSIS
sgmldiff [ options ... ] file1 file2 [ -a | --attributes | -c [ attributes | nesting | textpos ] | --context [ attributes | nesting | textpos ] | -s | --statistics | -h | --help | -v | --version ] DESCRIPTION
This perl script allows to determine the structural differences between two SGML files. It compares the files, regardless of what is in between the tags, to only focus on the markup. Its output is similar to diff(1). The typical use of sgmldiff is to compare an SGML file with its translation into another language. If the translation was done cleanly, sgmldiff returns without finding any difference in the markup. An example of a typical call to sgmldiff is: sgmldiff english.sgml italiano.sgml If there are differences in markup between both files, sgmldiff will output a series of differences reports summarized with lines of the form: 169a164 At line 169 of the first file, line 164 of the second file has been added. 8a12,15 At line 8 of the first file, lines 12 to 15 of the second file have been added. 41d28 Line 41 of the first file has been destroyed, to obtain line 28 of the second file. 63,66d61 Lines 63 to 66 of the first file have been destroyed. to obtain line 61 of the second file. 52c51 Line 52 of the first file has been changed into line 51 of the second file. 5,7c8,10 Lines 5 to 7 of the first file have been changed into lines 8 to 10 of the second line. In addition to those summaries, the lines of the first file are shown preceeded by '<' and the lines of the second file are shown preceeded by '>". OPTIONS
Here is the list of actions that can be requested to sgmldiff: [ -a | --attributes ] Include the attribute values in the difference tests. Don't set this value if the attributes are likely to be translated. Set this value if the attributes value shouldn't change between both files. Default is to don't include the attributes in the difference tests. [ -c [ attributes | nesting | textpos ] | --context [ attributes | nesting | textpos ] ] Add more context to the difference. Since every test between the tags is removed before testing the differences, sgmldiff is likely to resynchronize itself at the wrong place, by thinking the location in both files correspond, while it's not true. By adding more context to the compared area, such risk is disminished. The allowed values for the --context option are: attributes Take into account the attribute names. The attribute values are controlled by the attributes option. nesting Take into account the nesting level of all the compared tags. textpos Take into account the position in the text. [ -s | --statistics ] Print some SGML information at the end. [ -h | --help ] Print a short help message and exit [ -v | --version ] Print the version identifier and exit FILES
AUTHORS
Frederik Fouvry Developer of sgmldiff. SEE ALSO
jw(1) conversion from a SGML file to other file formats nsgmls(1) a base component of Jade DSSSL engine http://sources.redhat.com/docbook-tools/ <URL:http://sources.redhat.com/docbook-tools/> the home page of the DocBook tools, a compendium of all tools necessary to process DocBook files, including the DocBook-utils 12 September 2012 SGMLDIFF(1)
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