Hello,
So i have this file called /apps/turnout which looks like that of the contents of the /etc/shadow (but not exactly)
the file has a long list in it. basically, the contents of this file looks something similar to the following:
jajajajalala:D#$#AFVAdfda
lalabavisof:#%R@fafla#$... (3 Replies)
Hi ,
I have file named docs.txt
The content of the file look like this:
DOC disk location Size
======= ===== ============= =========
TXT A /dev/dm-1 10
TXT B /dev/dm-2 10
BIN C ... (3 Replies)
Hi there
I am trying to write an if statement in perl that will return "SUCCESS" if either of these conditions are true
a) if $changes is greater than 5 AND the $force flag is set to 1
OR
b) if $changes is greater than 0 AND $changes is less than 6
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
my $force =... (5 Replies)
i have a file ddd.txt
its delimiter is : but has , and "" within each column as below and also each line ends with ;
I_EP,"29":I_US,"120":I_P_ID,"2020":I_NEW,"600":I_OLD,"400":I_POW,"4.5":I_NAME,"TOM";... (9 Replies)
picked this up from another thread.
echo 1st_file.csv; nawk -F, 'NR==FNR{a++;next} a{b++}
END{for(i in b){if(b-1&&a!=b){print i";\t\t"b}else{print "NEW:"i";\t\t"b} } }' OFS=, 1st_file.csv *.csv | sort -r
i need to use the above but with a slight modification..
1.compare against 3 month... (25 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file. In this file when ever the word "ABC" occurs at position from 25 and 34 I would like to replace
the value at postion 100 to 5 for the first 1000 rows only.
I have written the following Awk command.
nawk 'substr($0,25,9)=="ABC" {print $0}' filename
The above command... (4 Replies)
Hello to all in forum,
Maybe an awk expert could help me with this complex task for me.
I have the input shown below and I would like to get the output as follow:
- I would like the output separated by commas.
- The header is fixed and will be the same always.
- For the lines containing... (22 Replies)
hello,
i have a complex awk problem...
i have two tables, one with a value (0 to 1) and it's corresponding p-value, like this:
1. table:
______________________________
value p-value
... ...
0.254 0.003
0.245 0.005
0.233 0.006
... ...
______________________________
and a... (6 Replies)
Hi I have a complex xml to be build using awk using a lookup file values. Below is the xml
<country name="xyz">
<state name="abc">
<city name="qwe" capital="yes"/>
<city name="asd" capital="no"/>
</state>
<state name="qrq">
<city name="rthy" capital="yes"/>
<state>
</country>
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I'm trying to transform my data from the following format:
eps:, 0.248281687841641, -2.83539034165844e-7, 2.78042576353472+6.3505226053266e-6i
to this:
eps:, 0.248281687841641, -2.83539034165844e-7, 2.78042576353472, +6.3505226053266e-6
so I can plot it with GnuPlot.
how do I... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rogeriogouvea
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
time
time(1) General Commands Manual time(1)Name
time - time a command
Syntax
time command
/bin/time command
Description
The command lets the specified command execute and then outputs the amount of elapsed real time, the time spent in the operating system,
and the time spent in execution of the command. Times are reported in seconds and are written to standard error.
If you are using any shell except the C shell, you can give the command as shown on the first line of the Syntax section. If you are using
the C shell, you must use the command's full pathname as shown on the second line of the Syntax section. If you do not use the full path-
name, will execute its own built-in command that supplies additional information and uses a different output format.
The command can be used to cause a command to be timed no matter how much CPU time it takes. For example:
% /bin/time cp /etc/rc /usr/bill/rc
0.1 real 0.0 user 0.0 sys
% /bin/time nroff sample1 > sample1.nroff
3.6 real 2.4 user 1.2 sys
This example indicates that the command used negligible amounts of user and system time and had an elapsed time of 1/10 second (0.1). The
command used 2.4 seconds of user time and 1.2 seconds of system time, and required 3.6 seconds of elapsed time.
Restrictions
Times are measured to an accuracy of 1/10 second. Thus, the sum of the user and system times can be larger than the elapsed time.
See Alsocsh(1)time(1)