Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Modify text file using shell script Post 302526737 by bhupinder08 on Wednesday 1st of June 2011 11:11:52 AM
Old 06-01-2011
Modify text file using shell script

Hi,

I have a text file which is following format -

COL VAL
ABC 1
ABC 2
ABC 3
ABC 4
ABC 5

My requirement is to search for a particular value (provided by user) in the file and comment the previous entries including that as well.

E.g. If I search for number 3, then the output file should be similar to -

COL VAL
#ABC 1
#ABC 2
#ABC 3
ABC 4
ABC 5

Kindly suggest with some options. Thanks for your time.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify a text or xml file

Hi all, I want to write a shell which would allow me to edit a text file or a xml file. Basically i want to add a new node in a existing xml file. The values for this new node are based on user input. Thanks in advance Zing (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: zing
9 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to modify a file using shell script

Hi, i am using SuonOS and ksh. i need to add data into a file(s.txt) using a shell script. i have to pass 3 parameters and these 3 paramaters should add into the file at end of the file. File s.txt is look like, --------------------------------- column1|column2|column3 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: syamkp
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help to modify perl script: Text file with line and more than 1 space

Dear Friends, I am beginner in Perl and trying to find the problem in a script. Kindly help me to modify the script. My script is not giving the output for the last field and followed text (LA: Language English). Input file & script as follows: Input file: Thu Mar 19 2:34:14 EDT 2009 STC... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: srsahu75
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with a shell script to modify one line and copy the next 9 to same file

Hi everyone, the problem is quite simple, yet I can't find an easy solution using awk. I need to search for a string in $3, then if I find this string, copy the line,modify $3, and copy the next 9 lines to the same file. My problem is in the copying of the lines... Finding and modifying... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Teroc
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Modify Text File

Hi, I would like to remove any lines from a text file that begin with #, or that are blank. How can I do that with BASH? Mike (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: msb65
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read data from .csv file through shell script & modify

I need to read data from a file called "test.csv" through shell script where the file contains values like name,price,descriptor etc. There are rows where descriptor (& in some rows name) are written as string & other characters like "car_+" OR "bike*" etc where it should contains strings like... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: raj100
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script to modify file in several directories

Hi, I want a script shell to automate modifying httpd.conf file for several instances of apache, save httpd.file before changing it, after modifying it and then restart apache. - Replace ServerRoot "xxxx" by ServerRoot "yyyy" of all directories : "... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bras39
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify the text file by script

Hi All the Helpers! I have a text file which looks like input.txt.I would request to please suggest me how can I make this file look like output.txt input.txt VOP 111 0 1 2 DEM 111 0 222 333 444 555 879 888 987 888 989 VOP 118 0... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Indra2011
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify text file using awk

I have text file with lines as shown here. Each row has 11 columns separated by tab. In each row, i want to split the 8th column such that the output should look like shown below. Here value in the 9th column is DP value and in the 10th column is MQ value followed by the values after resource.EFF=.... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: mehar
15 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Modify text file using sed

Hello all, I have some text files I need to do the following on: Delete banner page (lines 1-56) --I am doing this using sed Remove ^M --I am doing this using vi Remove trailer page --this can vary based on the contents of the file, it usually starts with *************************** I am... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeffs42885
5 Replies
ABCMATCH(1)						      General Commands Manual						       ABCMATCH(1)

NAME
abcmatch - search sequences of notes in an ABC file SYNOPSIS
abcmatch data-file [number] [-a] [-br d] [-c] [-con] [-ign] [-length_hist] [-pitch_hist] [-qnt] [-r n] [-v] [-ver] DESCRIPTION
abcmatch searches an ABC file containing (potentially) many tunes for specific sequences of notes. For example, if you know a few bars of a tune, you can use this program to find the tune having this sequence and perhaps identify the tune. At a minimum, abcmatch requires two files. A template file called match.abc which contains the bars that you are searching for and a large file consisting of a hundred or more ABC tunes. The program automatically loads up the match.abc file and then scans every tune in the large file. Though the program can be run stand-alone, it is really meant to be run with a GUI such as runabc.tcl (which is not yet part of Debian). Most of its output is rather cryptic. THE MATCHING PROCESS
The template file must be a well-formed ABC file containing the basic X:, M:, L:, and K: headers as well as the bars to be matched. (Nor- mally, this file is created by runabc.tcl.) It is important to finish each bar in the match file with a vertical line. abcmatch uses the key signature to figure out the relative position of the notes in the scale, and to determine all the assumed sharps and flats. Therefore the program can find matching bars in a tune that has been transposed to another key, as long as the key difference is not too large. Matches are output in a list format looking like 29 30 4 30 31 4 Each line indicates a particular match found by the program. The first number on each line gives the relative position of the tune in the data-file, while the next number gives the X: number of that tune. The last number is the bar number of the matching tune. Bar numbers are counted sequentially from the start of the tune, and all V: and P: indications are ignored. That is, the bar number returned by abcmatch may not match bar numbers printed by one of the PostScript-producing ABC processors such as abcm2ps or abcmidi-yaps. For the purposes of matching, abcmatch ignores all guitar chords, lyrics, note decorations (e.g., staccato markings), grace notes, etc. In chords such as [G2c2], only the highest note is considered. Any warnings or error messages from the ABC parser are suppressed unless the -c option is given. OPTIONS
-a Report any matching bars. By default, if the template file contains a sequence of several bars, the program will try to find places in the data file where the whole sequence matches. With this option, it returns all places in the data file where any of the bars in the template file match. -br d `Brief mode' is designed to identify groups of tunes sharing common bars. In this mode, the program determines the number of all bars in each tune from the data file which are also present in the template file. If the number of common bars is greater than or equal to the value of the d parameter, the program reports the tune and the number of common bars. Currently there is no user con- trol of the matching criterion; the rhythm must match exactly, and the notes are transposed to suit the key signature. -c Display error and warning messages from the ABC parser (which are suppressed by default). -con Do a pitch contour match. In this case, the program uses the key signature only to indicate accidentals. The pitch contour is com- puted from the pitch difference (interval) between adjacent notes. That is, C2 DE, c2 de, and G2 AB all have the same pitch contour. -ign Ignore simple bars. -length_hist This does no matching at all but returns a histogram of the distribution of note lengths in the data file. The output looks like length histogram 12 100 24 20 36 6 48 2 72 4 where a quarter note is 24 units, an eight note 12 units, a dotted half note 72 units etc. -pitch_hist This does no matching at all but returns a histogram of the distribution of pitches in the data file. The output looks like pitch histogram 64 2 66 9 67 11 where the first number on each line is a MIDI note number and the second is a count of the number of times that note occurred. -qnt Do a quantized pitch contour match. This works as described above for the -con option, but will also quantize the intervals as fol- lows: Unison and semitone intervals are assigned value 0, major 2nds to major 3rds value 1, and a perfect 4th or greater value 2. Negative numbers are used for descending intervals. -r n Resolution for matching. If the n parameter is zero, a perfect match must be found, meaning that the lengths of each note in a bar must match exactly in order to be reported. The larger the value of n, the looser the match will be. Note lengths are converted into temporal units where a quarter note is normally assigned a value of 24 (therefore an eighth note has a value of 12, a sixteenth a value of 6, a half note a value of 48 etc.) If you specify a temporal resolution of 12, then the pitch values of the notes only need to match at the time units that are multiples of an eight note. This means that the program would match the two bars C2 D2 and C C D D, as well as C2 D2 and C/D/C/D/D2. By selecting a suitable value for n, you can search for matches only at the beginning of a mea- sure or at the beginning of each beat. -v Run verbosely. -ver Display the program's version number. LIMITATIONS
The program has some limitations. For example, the data file must contain bar lines, and tied notes cannot be longer than the equivalent of 8 quarter notes. A resolution (-r option) that is too small may cause some buffers to be exceeded. When there are differences of key signa- tures of more than 5 semitones, the program may transpose the notes in the wrong direction. Also, tunes with more than one key signature or time signature may not be processed correctly. SEE ALSO
abc2midi(1), midi2abc(1), mftext(1) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Anselm Lingnau <lingnau@debian.org> for the GNU/Linux system. VERSION
This manual page describes abcmatch version 1.42 as of 21 December 2006. 24 August 2007 ABCMATCH(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:41 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy