hey.....
i do have text where the contents are like as follows,
FILE_TYPE_NUM_01=FILE_TYPE=01|FILE_DESC=Periodic|FILE_SCHDL_TYPE=Daily|FILE_SCHDL=|FILE_SCHDL_TIME=9:00am|RESULTS=B
FILE_TYPE_NUM_02=FILE_TYPE=02|FILE_DESC=NCTO|FILE_SCHDL_TYPE=Daily|FILE_SCHDL=|FILE_SCHDL_TIME=9:00am|RESULTS=M... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone help me with the text editing I need here. I have a file that contains the following lines for example: (line numbers are for illustration only)
1 Hello world fantasy.
2 Hello worldfuntastic.
3 Hello world wonderful.
I would like to get all those lines of text that... (5 Replies)
This was mistaken as homework in a different forum, but is not. These are questions that are close to what I am trying to do at work.
QUESTION1:
How do you grep only an exact string. I am using Solaris10 and do not have any GNU products installed.
Contents of car.txt
CAR1_KEY0
CAR1_KEY1... (1 Reply)
This post was previously mistaken for homework, but is actually a small piece of what I working on at work. Please answer if you can.
QUESTION1
How do you grep only an exact string. I am using Solaris10 and do not have any GNU products installed.
Contents of car.txt
CAR1_KEY0
CAR1_KEY1... (2 Replies)
I am searching for an exact match on a value read from another file to lookup an email address in another file. The file being checked is called "contacts" and it has Act #, email address, and contact person.
1693;abc1693@yahoo.comt;Tommy D
6423;abc6423@yahoo.comt;Jim Doran... (2 Replies)
Hello!
I have 2 files named tacs.tmp and tacDB.txt
tacs.tmp looks like this
0
10235647
102700
106800
107200
1105700
tacDB.txt looks like this
100100,Mitsubishi,G410,Handheld,,0,0,0
100200,Siemens,A53,Handheld,,0,0,0
100300,Sony Ericsson,TBD (AAB-1880030-BV),Handheld,,0,0,0... (2 Replies)
If I have a file like the following
abc.1
abc
abc_1
abc..1
abc*1
abc@1
abc def ghr
def......
ddef 5466 def ed
def** 123445
I`m trying to find exact words from the list
abc
def (4 Replies)
I am currently having some issues while trying to grep for a exact string inside a file. I have tried doing this from command line and things work fine i.e. when no match is found, return code=1 but when its done as part of my script it returns 0 for the same command - I dont know if there is an... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ads89
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
fanboy
FILTERS(6) Games Manual FILTERS(6)NAME
ken, b1ff, censor, chef, cockney, eleet, fanboy, fudd, jethro, jibberish, jive, kenny, kraut, ky00te, nethack, newspeak, nyc, pirate,
rasterman, scottish, spammer, scramble, studly, uniencode, upside-down - assorted text filters
SYNOPSIS
$SHELL | chef
newspeak < thesis.tex > newthesis.tex
eleet | wall # b1ff works well too
b1ff | ircII | censor
DESCRIPTION
All of these programs are filters to do all sorts of strange things to text. No personal, racial, religious or societal slurs are
intended. For amusement only.
All the filters read input from stdin, change it, and write the filtered text to stdout. Some filters also support reading from files and
writing to stdout.
b1ff The B1FF filter
cockney
Cockney English
chef convert English on stdin to Mock Swedish on stdout
eleet K3wl hacker slang
fanboy Speak like a fanboy. Filters out extraneous words and focuses on the words fans use. By default, it will speak like a fan of
git/Linus/linux development. To change this, pass as parameters the words that the fanboy typically uses. Alternatively, pass the
name of a topic that typically has fanboys to use a predefined word list.
fudd Elmer Fudd
jethro Hillbilly text filter
jive Jive English
jibberish
Runs text through a random selection of the rest of the filters, to make really weird output.
ken English into Cockney, featuring (dubious) rhyming slang for a lot of computer terminology.
kraut Generates text with a bad German accent.
kenny Generates text as spoken by Kenny on South Park.
ky00te This program places a very cute (and familiar to FurryMuck fans) accent on any text file.
nethackify
Wiped out text like can be found in nethack.
newspeak
A-la-1984
censor CDA-ize text
nyc Brooklyn English
pirate Talk like a pirate.
rasterman
Makes text look like it came from the keyboard of Carsten Haitzler.
scottish
Fake scottish (dwarven) accent filter, inspired by the character "Durkon" from Order of the Stick.
spammer
Turns honest text into something that is liable to be flagged as spam.
scramble
Scramble the "inner" letters of each word in the input into a random order. The resulting text is still strangely readable.
studly Studly caps.
uniencode
Use glorious unicode to the fullest possibile extent. As seen previously in many man pages.
upside-down
Flips text upside down. Stand on your head and squint to read the output.
SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/filters/SAMPLES
Lists samples of the output of all the filters.
Other filters:
pig From the bsdgames package, pig converts text to pig latin.
dog --oog
From the dog package, dog can also function as a filter, converting text to OOG-speak.
AUTHORS
The eleet, upside-down, chef, b1ff, and censor filters were written by Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net>. Daniel V Klein <dvk@lonewolf.com>
wrote the cockney, jive, and nyc filters. jibberish is by Raul Miller <rdm@test.legislate.com>, jethro is by Duane Paulson <ci922@cleve-
land.freenet.edu>, rasterman is by Zachary Beane, ken is by Stephen K Mulrine <skm@eqsn.net>, newspeak is by Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>,
studly is by Nick Phillips <nwp@lemon-computing.com>, Gurkan Sengun <gurkan@linuks.mine.nu> wrote nethackify, Dougal Campbell <dougal@gun-
ters.org> wrote pirate, kraut is by John Sparks, scottish by Adam Borowski, Kenny is by Christian Garbs and Alan Eldridge, and scramble by
Andrew J. Buehler.
FILTERS(6)