Hello,
I have a single column of data that I would like to cut/print (with awk or ...) into multiple columns at every empty row (or common character).
Input:
5.99123
5.94693
7.21383
5.95202
0.907935
5.99149
6.08427
0.975774
6.077
Output:
5.99123 5.95202 6.08427
5.94693... (7 Replies)
Hi -
I'm new to the awk programming language. I'm trying to print a single column of data to several columns, and I found an article on iTWorld.com (ITworld.com - Printing in columns). It looks like the mkCols2 script is very close to what I need to do, but it looks like the end of the code... (2 Replies)
I have a program which gives me the output as a single column with hundreds of rows like:
213
314
324
324
123
I want to be able to create a new file from this file which allows me to set the number of rows and columns in the new file, i.e. for this example, if I specify 3 rows and 2... (5 Replies)
Apologies if this has been covered - I did search but couldn't find what I was looking for.
I have a simple X-Y input file. I want to convert it from two columns into 8 columns - 4 pairs of X-Y data. So my input file looks like
X1 Y1
X2 Y2
X3 Y3
X4 Y4
X5 Y5
etc
And I want it to look... (8 Replies)
Hello Experts,
I am new to this forum, I would like to do the following changes in one of the column of a txt file, which is having around 9 column.
For example, column 3 is having letters like this
AB11
AB12
C
CA
CB
AC1
AC2
I would like to convert the same column as follows
... (5 Replies)
Hello all
I have data like
1
2
3
4
5
I wish my output would be like
1,2,3,4,5
For this i have executed
'BEGIN {FS="\n"; ORS=","} {print $0}' test
and got the output as
1,2,3,4,5,
I do not want to have , at the end of 5. output should be like (5 Replies)
I have this input:
10 22 1 100
11 22 10 1 50
14 3 1 100
23 3 1 100
24 15 1 100
10 22 5 3 1 33.333
11 22 1 100
It has an inconsistent number of fields but the last field is determined by 100/(NF-2) using awk.
I want to take this multiple columned input file and transform so that... (2 Replies)
Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(User Contributed Perl DocumentPerl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(3pm)NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices - Negative array index should be used.
AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
DESCRIPTION
Conway points out that
$arr[$#arr];
$arr[$#arr-1];
$arr[@arr-1];
$arr[@arr-2];
are equivalent to
$arr[-1];
$arr[-2];
$arr[-1];
$arr[-2];
and the latter are more readable, performant and maintainable. The latter is because the programmer no longer needs to keep two variable
names matched.
This policy notices all of the simple forms of the above problem, but does not recognize any of these more complex examples:
$some->[$data_structure]->[$#{$some->[$data_structure]} -1];
my $ref = @arr;
$ref->[$#arr];
CONFIGURATION
This Policy is not configurable except for the standard options.
AUTHOR
Chris Dolan <cdolan@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2006-2011 Chris Dolan.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-07 Perl::Critic::Policy::Variables::RequireNegativeIndices(3pm)