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Full Discussion: Rounding number, but....
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Rounding number, but.... Post 302517739 by Gery on Wednesday 27th of April 2011 03:16:46 PM
Old 04-27-2011
Java

Dear bartus11 and Dear cfajohnson,

Many thanks for your answers, I tried both and the one that it's close to what I need is bartus11's code. However, I forgot to say that I have a range of values from 0 to 100 000. In fact, this code worked well for most of my values (and also more than 100 000), but I have problems in the range between 99.5 and 999.4. For example, if I run the code with:

Code:
var=99.4
echo $var|awk '{x=int($1+0.5);sub("...$","000",x);print x}'

then I get 99, which is very good.

However, from 99.5 to 999.4, I get 000. In this case, for instance, I expect to have with the number 459.3244, just 450.

In the case this code coulnd't be modified to cover the whole range (from 0 to 100 000), how could the script be modified to cover the range from 99.5 to 999.4?

I'm very grateful for your excellent support, many thanks again,

Best regards,
 

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IOPING(1)							   User Commands							 IOPING(1)

NAME
ioping - simple disk I/O latency monitoring tool SYNOPSYS
ioping [-LCDRq] [-c count] [-w deadline] [-p period] [-i interval] [-s size] [-S wsize] [-o offset] device|file|directory ioping -h | -v DESCRIPTION
This tool lets you monitor I/O latency in real time. OPTIONS
-c count Stop after count requests. -w deadline Stop after deadline time passed. -p period Print raw statistics for every period requests. -i interval Set time between requests to interval (1s). -s size Request size (4k). -S size Working set size (1m). -o offset Offset in input file. -L Use sequential operations rather than random. This also sets request size to 256k (as in -s 256k). -C Use cached I/O. -D Use direct I/O. -R Disk seek rate test (same as -q -i 0 -w 3 -S 64m). -q Suppress human-readable output. -h Display help message and exit. -v Display version and exit. Argument suffixes For options that expect time argument (-i and -w), default is seconds, unless you specify one of the following suffixes (case-insensitive): us, usec microseconds ms, msec milliseconds s, sec seconds m, min minutes h, hour hours For options that expect "size" argument (-s, -S and -o), default is bytes, unless you specify one of the following suffixes (case-insensi- tive): s disk sectors (a sector is always 512). k, kb kilobytes p memory pages (a page is always 4K). m, mb megabytes g, gb gigabytes t, tb terabytes For options that expect "number" argument (-p and -c) you can optionally specify one of the following suffixes (case-insensitive): k kilo (thousands, 1 000) m mega (millions, 1 000 000) g giga (billions, 1 000 000 000) t tera (trillions, 1 000 000 000 000) EXIT STATUS
Returns 0 upon success. The following error codes are defined: 1 Invalid usage (error in arguments). 2 Error during preparation stage. 3 Error during runtime. EXAMPLES
ioping . Show disk I/O latency using the default values and the current directory, until interrupted. ioping -c 10 -s 1M /tmp Measure latency on /tmp using 10 requests of 1 megabyte each. ioping -R /dev/sda Measure disk seek rate. ioping -RL /dev/sda Measure disk sequential speed. SEE ALSO
Homepage <http://code.google.com/p/ioping/>. AUTHORS
This program was written by Konstantin Khlebnikov <koct9i@gmail.com>. Man-page was written by Kir Kolyshkin <kir@openvz.org>. July 2011 IOPING(1)
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