Those are carriage returns, not line feeds, which seem pretty "Apple"; UNIX uses linefeed. I did not know sed $ fired for every file, not just for the last. Mine does not. A shell script does this easily:
As the title suggests, i am having some trouble figuring out how to pass spaces and carriage returns to a 'here document' ie
#!/bin/bash
/usr/local/install_script.sh <<SCRIPT
yes
no
<pass carriage retun here>
yes
no
<pass a space and then a carriage return here>
exit
SCRIPT
any... (0 Replies)
Is there any way to remove carriage retuns between the records?
We have input records separated by TABS and have carriage returns as below:
123 456 789 ABC "1952.00" 678 "abcdef
ghik
lmno"
Above we... (10 Replies)
How do we delete all carriage returns after a particular string using sed inside a K Shell?
e.g. I have a text file named file1 below:
$ more file1
Group#=1 User=A
Role=a1
Group#=2 User=B
Role=a1
Role=b1
Group#=3 User=C
Role=b1
I want the carriage returns to be delete on the... (12 Replies)
I need to replace thousands of carriage returns/line breaks in a large xml file and with spaces. I hope to do so with a script, called, for example, "removeCRs." I would invoke this at the command line as
ml5003$ sed -f /Users/ml5003/removeCRs oldFile > newFile
The script, I presume, would... (4 Replies)
Hello, I have read a few threads on this subject and tried a few things out, but still come up short.
There was one good example, then the last reply was something to the effect of 'Use Sed' & 'Read a book'...
Well I read a bunch of online tutorials on sed, awk, tr, but still can't get the... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I need help adding carriage returns at specific intervals (say 692 characters) to a text file that's one continous string. I'm working in AIX5.3. Any quick help is appreciated.
Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file which is having some carriage return in one of the field for which single line is coming in multiple lines.
I want to combine all those multiple lines of that field into one line.
Eg:
Input:
Id, Name, Location, Comments, Dept
2, John, US, I am from US.
I... (5 Replies)
I have a CSV with carriage returns in place of newlines. I am trying to use tr to remove them, but it isn't working.
Academic year,Term,Course name,Period,Last name,Nickname
2012-2013,First Semester,English 12,4th Period,Arnold,Adam
2012-2013,First Semester,English 12,4th Period,Adams,Jim... (1 Reply)
I'm on Linux version 2.6.32-696.3.1.el6.x86_64, using the Ksh shell.
I'm working with the input file:
John Daggett, 341 King Road, Plymouth MA
Alice Ford, 22 East Broadway, Richmond VA
Orville Thomas, 11345 Oak Bridge Road, Tulsa OK
Terry Kalkas, 402 Lans Road, Beaver Falls PA
Eric Adams,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: prooney
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
cat
CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)NAME
cat - catenate and print
SYNOPSIS
cat [ -u ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -v ] file ...
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
displays the file on the standard output, and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no input file is given, or if the argument `-' is encountered, cat reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in the block
size recommended by stat(2) unless the standard output is a terminal, when it is line buffered. The -u option makes the output completely
unbuffered.
The -n option displays the output lines preceded by lines numbers, numbered sequentially from 1. Specifying the -b option with the -n
option omits the line numbers from blank lines.
The -s option crushes out multiple adjacent empty lines so that the output is displayed single spaced.
The -v option displays non-printing characters so that they are visible. Control characters print like ^X for control-x; the delete char-
acter (octal 0177) prints as ^?. Non-ascii characters (with the high bit set) are printed as M- (for meta) followed by the character of
the low 7 bits. A -e option may be given with the -v option, which displays a `$' character at the end of each line. Specifying the -t
option with the -v option displays tab characters as ^I.
SEE ALSO cp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)BUGS
Beware of `cat a b >a' and `cat a b >b', which destroy the input files before reading them.
4th Berkeley Distribution May 5, 1986 CAT(1)