I am looking to get a output of "2 apple found" from the awk command below.
black:34104 tomonorisoejima$ cat tomo
apple apple
black:34104 tomonorisoejima$ awk '/apple/ {count++}END{print count " apple found"}' tomo
1 apple found
black:34104 tomonorisoejima$ (5 Replies)
Hi all,
is there a way to find the occurrence of two strings in a line of a file?
e.g. I have
XXXX yyyyy zzzz 111
XXXX yyyyy zzzz 222
XXXX yyyyy zzzz 333
XXXX yyyyy zzzz 444
and want to find in one shot
XXXX yyyyy zzzz 222
Thank you,... (9 Replies)
Could anybody help with this?
I have input below .....
david,39
david,39
emelie,40
clarissa,22
bob,42
bob,42
tim,32
bob,39
david,38
emelie,47
what i want to do is count how many names there are with different ages, so output would be like this ....
david,2
emelie,2
clarissa,1... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a similar input format-
A_1 2
B_0 4
A_1 1
B_2 5
A_4 1
and looking to print in this output format with headers. can you suggest in awk?awk because i am doing some pattern matching from parent file to print column 1 of my input using awk already.Thanks!
letter number_of_letters... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a requirement where in I need to insert delimiters before the last column of the total delimiters is less than a specified number.
Say if the delimiters is less than 139, I need to insert 2 columns ( with blanks) before the last field
awk -F 'Ç' '{ if (NF-1 < 139)} END { "Insert 2... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
If i would like to process a file input as below:
col1 col2 col3 ...col100
1 A C E A ...
3 D E G A
5 T T A A
6 D C A G
how can i perform a for loop to count the occurences of letters in each column? (just like uniq -c ) in every column.
on top of that, i would also like... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I have a table that looks like what is shown below:
AA
BB
CC
XY
PQ
RS
AA
BB
CC
XY
RS
I would like the total counts depending on the set they belong to:
if search pattern is in {AA, BB, CC} --> count them as Type1 | wc -l (3 Replies)
Hi All,
let's say an input looks like:
C1,C2,C3,C4,C5,C6,C7,C8,C9,C10,C11
----------------------------------
1|0123452|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0156123|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0178903|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0127896|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0981678|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
... (6 Replies)
Hello Team,
I need your help on the following:
My input file a.txt is as below:
3330690|373846|108471
3330690|373846|108471
0640829|459725|100001
0640829|459725|100001
3330690|373847|108471
Here row 1 and row 2 of column 1 are identical but corresponding column 2 value are... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: angshuman
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
strncasecmp
STRING(3) Library Functions Manual STRING(3)NAME
strcat, strncat, strcmp, strncmp, strcasecmp, strncasecmp, strcpy, strncpy, strlen, index, rindex - string operations
SYNOPSIS
#include <strings.h>
char *strcat(s, append)
char *s, *append;
char *strncat(s, append, count)
char *s, *append;
int count;
strcmp(s1, s2)
char *s1, *s2;
strncmp(s1, s2, count)
char *s1, *s2;
int count;
strcasecmp(s1, s2)
char *s1, *s2;
strncasecmp(s1, s2, count)
char *s1, *s2;
int count;
char *strcpy(to, from)
char *to, *from;
char *strncpy(to, from, count)
char *to, *from;
int count;
strlen(s)
char *s;
char *index(s, c)
char *s, c;
char *rindex(s, c)
char *s, c;
DESCRIPTION
These functions operate on null-terminated strings. They do not check for overflow of any receiving string.
Strcat appends a copy of string append to the end of string s. Strncat copies at most count characters. Both return a pointer to the null-
terminated result.
Strcmp compares its arguments and returns an integer greater than, equal to, or less than 0, according as s1 is lexicographically greater
than, equal to, or less than s2. Strncmp makes the same comparison but looks at at most count characters. Strcasecmp and strncasecmp are
identical in function, but are case insensitive. The returned lexicographic difference reflects a conversion to lower-case.
Strcpy copies string from to to, stopping after the null character has been moved. Strncpy copies exactly count characters, appending
nulls if from is less than count characters in length; the target may not be null-terminated if the length of from is count or more. Both
return to.
Strlen returns the number of non-null characters in s.
Index (rindex) returns a pointer to the first (last) occurrence of character c in string s or zero if c does not occur in the string. Set-
ting c to NULL works.
4th Berkeley Distribution October 22, 1987 STRING(3)