Hi!
1. I have a parameter file containing path to log files. For this example both paths are the same, one is stated directly and the second using env variables.
/oracle/admin/orcl/bdump/:atlas:trc:N
${ORACLE_BASE}/admin/${ORACLE_SID}/bdump/:${ORACLE_SID}:trc:N
2. I try to parse the path... (1 Reply)
Hi All:
I have following files:
File 1:
<header>
text...
text ..
text ..
text ..
<\header>
x
y
z
...
File 2:
<header>
text...
text ..
text .. (4 Replies)
I had two files 1.txt 2.txt. I want a 3rd file(o/p) 3.txt like below based on the common elements from the first coulmns of 1.txt and 2.txt.
1.txt
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
2.txt (6 Replies)
I have the following space-delimited input:
1 11.785710 117.857100
1 15 150
1 20 200
1 25 250
3 2.142855 21.428550
3 25 250
22 1.071435 10.714350
The first field is the ID number, the second field is the percentage of the total points that the person has and the third column is the number... (3 Replies)
I have 2 files,
file01= 7 columns, row unknown (but few)
file02= 7 columns, row unknown (but many)
now I want to create an output with the first field that is shared in both of them and then subtract the results from the rest of the fields and print there
e.g.
file 01
James|0|50|25|10|50|30... (1 Reply)
Dear all,
I have a simple question. I have a file like below (separated by tab):
col1 col2 col3 col4 col5 col6 col7
21 66745 rs1234 21 rs5678 23334 0.89
21 66745 rs2334 21 rs9978 23334 0.89
21 66745 ... (4 Replies)
Hello :)
I am in this situation:
Input: two tab-delimited files, `File1` and `File2`. `File2` (`$2`) has to be parsed by patterns found in `File1` (`$1`).
Expected output: tab-delimited file, `File3`. `File3` has to contain the same rows as `File2`, plus the corresponding value in... (5 Replies)
I have the following data set about the snps ID txt file
POS ID
78599583 rs987435
33395779 rs345783
189807684 rs955894
33907909 rs6088791
75664046 rs11180435
218890658 rs17571465
127630276 rs17011450
90919465 rs6919430
and a gene... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: marwah
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bntext
bntext(5) File Formats Manual bntext(5)NAME
bnmotd.txt, bnnews.txt bnissue.txt - messages for the Unix Battle.net daemon
DESCRIPTION
The file bnmotd.txt contains text displayed by bnetd(1), when users first log into the server.
The file bnnews.txt contains text displayed when the user uses the /news chat command.
The files consist of raw text with printf-style formatting escapes. Each line of a file can contain a type formatter from the following
list:
%B Use the broadcast attribute (???).
%C Execute the line as if the user entered it as a command.
%E Use the error attribute (red).
%I Use the info attribute (yellow). This is the same was %W.
%M Normal chat message (white). This will appear as if the user said it.
%T Emote chat message (???). This will appear as if the user said it.
%W Use the warning attribute (yellow). This is the same was %I.
Within a line, any of the following format formatters may be used:
%% Expand to a literal percent sign (%).
%a Expand to the number of accounts on the server.
%c Expand to the number of channels on the server. This includes all permanent and current temporary channels.
%g Expand to the number of games on the server. This includes both public and private (passworded) games.
%h Expand to the hostname of the server (as returned by gethostname(2)).
%i Expand to this user's account ID number, formatted with a leading pound (#) sign and leading zeros.
%l Expand to this user's current chat name which is usually the same
%r Expand to the IP of the remote machine (the client).
%t Expand to four character client tag.
%u Expand to the number of users logged into the server.
%v Expand to the version number of the server.
SEE ALSO bnetd(1)AUTHOR
Ross Combs (ross@bnetd.org)
2 August, 2001 bntext(5)