Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: string manipulation
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting string manipulation Post 302530296 by alister on Monday 13th of June 2011 12:47:06 PM
Old 06-13-2011
Alternatively, a case...esac sh statement can be used. No real need to bother with external tools such as sed, awk, et al.

Code:
case $MONTHEND in
    Jan) MTS=01;;
    Feb) MTS=02;;
    Mar) MTS=03;;
    ...
    Dec) MTS=12;;
esac

Better yet, you can tell users to stuff it and prompt them thusly:
Code:
echo "Enter a two digit month (01-12): "

That last suggestion is a joke ... kinda Smilie

Regards,
Alister
This User Gave Thanks to alister For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

String Manipulation

Hi, Suppose I have the following text in a file. ORA-00942: table or view does not exist ORA-01555: snapshot too old: rollback segment number string with name "string" too small Is there any way I can list all the text that starts only with 'ORA-'? Or there any grep command that can... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: kakashi_jet
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

string manipulation

Hi, I have a file with rows of text like so : E100005568374098100000015667 D100005568374032000000112682 H100005228374060800000002430 I need to grab just the last digits(bolded) of each line without the proceeding text/numbers. Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: james6
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

String manipulation

Hi, i am just gettin exposed to UNIX. Could anyone of u help me out with dis problem..? i have a variable 'act' which has the value as follows, echo $act gives -0- -0- -----0---- 2008-06-04 -0- -0- echo "$act" | awk '{print ($act)}' gives, -0- -0- -----0---- 2008-06-04 -0- -0- I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jerrynimrod
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

string manipulation

i have a file that contains a pattern like this: ajay 1234 newyork available kumar 2345 denver singh 2345 newyork ajay 3456 denver kumar 3456 newyork singh 3456 delhi available ajay 4567 miami kumar 4567 miami singh 4567 delhi i want to search for each line... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ajay41aj
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

I need help with string manipulation

First of all I am VERY new to this so bare with me and try and explain everything even if it seems simple. Basically I want to read a line of text from a html file. See if the line of text has a certain string in it. copy an unknown number of characters (the last 4 characters wiil be ".jpg" the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: c3lica
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

String Manipulation

Hi, I have a file in the following format 123|shanwer|15DEC2010|bgbh|okok|16JAN3000|okok| I want the following to be in following format 123|shanwer|12\15\2010|bgbh|okok|01\16\3000|okok| SED/PERL/AWK Gurus could you please help me with this? Thanks Shankar (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shan2210
8 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

String manipulation

Hi All, Pls help me out on the below, 05 LAMSZ201-ZM-MEMO2-DATE02-5 PIC X(10). 05 LAMSZ201-ZM-MEMO2-AMT02-5 PIC S9(13)V99. 05 LAMSZ201-ZM-MEMO2-TYPE02-6 PIC XXX. 05 LAMSZ201-ZM-MEMO2-DATE02-6 PIC X(10). 05 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: baskivs
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

String manipulation

Hello Could you help with small script: How to split string X1 into 3 string String X1 can have 1 or many strings X1='A1:B1:C1:D1:A2:B2:C2:D2:A3:B3:C3:D3' This is output which I want to have: Z1='A1:B1:C1:D1' Z2='A2:B2:C2:D2' Z3='A3:B3:C3:D3' (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikus
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Deleting part of a string : string manipulation

i have something like this... echo "teCertificateId" | awk -F'Id' '{ print $1 }' | awk -F'te' '{ print $2 }' Certifica the awk should remove 'te' only if it is present at the start of the string.. anywhere else it should ignore it. expected output is Certificate (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: vivek d r
7 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

String Manipulation

I'm making a little game in Perl, and I am trying to remove the first instance of a character in an arbitrary string. For example, if the string is "cupcakes"and the user enters another string that contains letters from "cupcake" e.g: "sake"the original string will now look like this (below)... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: whyte_rhyno
3 Replies
SH(1)							      General Commands Manual							     SH(1)

NAME
sh, ., break, case, cd, continue, eval, exec, exit, export, for, if, read, readonly, set, shift, trap, umask, wait, while - shell SYNOPSIS
sh [-eiknqstvxu] [-c str] [file] OPTIONS
-c Execute the commands in str -e Quit on error -i Interactive mode; ignore QUIT, TERMINATE, INTERRUPT -k Look for name=value everywhere on command line -n Do not execute commands -q Change qflag from sig_ign to sig_del -s Read commands from standard input -t Exit after reading and executing one command -v Echo input lines as they are read -x Trace -u Unset variables EXAMPLES
sh script # Run a shell script DESCRIPTION
Sh is the shell, which forms the user's main interface with the system. On startup, the shell reads /etc/profile and $HOME/.profile, if they exist, and executes any commands they contain. The Minix shell has most of the features of the V7 (Bourne) shell, including redirect- ion of input and output, pipes, magic characters, background processes, and shell scripts. A brief summary follows, but whole books have been written on shell programming alone. Some of the more common notations are: date # Regular command sort <file # Redirect stdin (standard input) sort <file1 >file2 # Redirect stdin and stdout cc file.c 2>error # Redirect stderr a.out >f 2>&1 # Combine standard output and standard error sort <file1 >>file2 #Append output to file2 sort <file1 >file2 & #Background job (ls -l; a.out) & # Run two background commands sequentially sort <file | wc # Two-process pipeline sort <f | uniq | wc # Three-process pipeline ls -l *.c # List all files ending in .c ls -l [a-c]* # List all files beginning with a, b, or c ls -l ? # List all one-character file names ls ? # List the file whose name is question mark ls '???' # List the file whose name is three question marks v=/usr/ast # Set shell variable v ls -l $v # Use shell variable v PS1='Hi! ' # Change the primary prompt to Hi! PS2='More: ' # Change the secondary prompt to More: ls -l $HOME # List the home directory echo $PATH # Echo the search path echo $? # Echo exit status of previous command in decimal echo $$ # Echo shell's pid in decimal echo $! # Echo PID of last background process echo $# # Echo number of parameters (shell script) echo $2 # Echo second parameter (shell script) echo "$2" # Echo second parameter without expanding spaces echo $* # Echo all parameters (shell script) echo $@ # Echo all parameters (shell script) echo "$@" # Echo all parameters without expanding spaces The shell uses the following variables for specific purposes: SHELL the path of the current shell HOME the default value for the cd(1) command PATH the directories to be searched to find commands IFS the internal field separators for command strings PS1 the primary shell prompt PS2 the secondary shell prompt There are various forms of substitution on the shell command line: `...` Command string between back-quotes is replaced by its output "..." Permits variable substitution between quotes '...' Inhibits variable substitution between quotes $VAR Replaced by contents of variable VAR ${VAR} Delimits variable VAR from any following string The expressions below depend on whether or not VAR has ever been set. If VAR has been set, they give: ${VAR-str} Replace expression by VAR, else by str ${VAR=str} Replace expression by VAR, else by str and set VAR to str ${VAR?str} Replace expression by VAR, else print str and exit shell ${VAR+str} Replace expression by str, else by null string If a colon is placed after VAR, the expressions depend on whether or not VAR is currently set and non-null. The shell has a number of built-in commands: : return true status . fn execute shell script fn on current path break [n] break from a for, until or while loop; exit n levels continue [n] continue a for, until or while loop; resume nth loop cd [dir] change current working directory; move to $HOME eval cmd rescan cmd, performing substitutions eval rescan the current command line exec cmd execute cmd without creating a new process exec <|> with no command name, modify shell I/O exit [n] exit a shell program, with exit value n export [var] export var to shell's children; list exported variables pwd print the name of the current working directory read var read a line from stdin and assign to var readonly [var] make var readonly; list readonly variables set -f set shell flag (+f unsets flag) set str set positional parameter to str set show the current shell variables shift reassign positional parameters (except ${0}) one left times print accumulated user and system times for processes trap arg sigs trap signals sigs and run arg on receipt trap list trapped signals umask [n] set the user file creation mask; show the current umask wait [n] wait for process pid n; wait for all processes The shell also contains a programming language, which has the following operators and flow control statements: # Comment The rest of the line is ignored = Assignment Set a shell variable && Logical AND Execute second command only if first succeeds || Logical OR Execute second command only if first fails (...) Group Execute enclosed commands before continuing for For loop (for ... in ... do ... done) case Case statement ((case ... ) ... ;; ... esac) esac Case statement end while While loop (while ... do ... done) do Do/For/While loop start (do ... until ...) done For/While loop end if Conditional statement (if ... else ... elif ... fi) in For loop selection then Conditional statement start else Conditional statement alternative elif Conditional statement end until Do loop end fi Conditional statement end SEE ALSO
echo(1), expr(1), pwd(1), true(1). SH(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:54 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy