I would like to merge data from a reference file and a data file to produce a new output file as shown below.
Reference file,data file,output file
a , b 2 , a 0
b , d 4 , b 2
c , , c 0
d , , d 4
e, , e 0 (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to awk/unix and am trying to put together an awk script to perform an action similar to vlookup between the two csv files.
Here are the contents of the two files:
File 1:
Date,ParentID,Number,Area,Volume,Dimensions
2014-01-01,ABC,247,83430.33,857.84,8110.76... (9 Replies)
Hi folks,
awk 'NR==FNR {m=$0; next} $1 in m{$0=m} {print}' file2 file1
Works a charm for a vlookup type query, sourced from https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-and-scripting/215998-vlookup-using-awk.html
However my column content has white spaces and numbers. Example
file1
The Man... (6 Replies)
Hello Everybody
I am looking for vlookup like functionality in Linux since two files I have are very big(1000MB each) and its not opening completely in excel.
Here the requirement
file1
11,12,13
16,14,12
28,21,22
22,23,24 file 3
18,16,16
14,12,12
23,22,24
16,11,13 here... (8 Replies)
I need to vlookup and check the server not found.
Source file 1
server1
server2
server3
server4
server5_root
server6_silver
server7
server7-test
server7-temp
Source file 2
server1_bronze (6 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I need to replace values of column 2 array1 with values of column 2 array2 based on a lookup of column 4 value, but only return a value IF the values in column 1 of BOTH array1 and array2 match, otherwise keep original value in column 2 of array1. Both files are tab delimited... (2 Replies)
Hello, i am trying to print group name column(etc/group) on script (etc/passwd) since group name is not listed on etc/passwd columns. Im trying to do a vlookup. but i cant figure out how i can insert the vlookup command FNR==NR inside the print out command or the output. I also tried exporting... (2 Replies)
Hi I just want again to ask for help on what command to use to vlookup f1 group name in "/etc/group" matching f3 of it to "/etc/passwd" f4. I do need to display group name in the output of /etc/passwd without using awk or NR==FNR command. thank you
while
IFS=: read -r f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 f7... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I want to compare same column in two files, if values match then display the column or display "NA".
Ex :
File 1 :
123
abc
xyz
pqr
File 2:
122
aab
fdf
pqr
fff
qqq
rrr (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hkoshekay
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
srec_emon52
srec_emon52(5) File Formats Manual srec_emon52(5)NAME
srec_emon52 - Elektor Monitor (EMON52) file format
DESCRIPTION
This format is used by the monitor EMON52, developed by the European electronics magazine Elektor (Elektuur in Holland). Elektor wouldn't
be Elektor if they didn't try to reinvent the wheel. It's a mystery why they didn't use an existing format for the project. Only the
Elektor Assembler will produce this file format, reducing the choice of development tools dramatically.
Records
All data lines are called records, and each record contains the following four fields:
+---+------+---+-----------+------+
|cc | aaaa | : | dd ... dd | ssss |
The field are defined as follows: +---+------+---+-----------+------+
cc The byte count. A two digit hex value (1 byte), counting the actual data bytes in the record. The byte count is separated from
the next field by a space.
aaaa The address field. A four hex digit (2 byte) number representing the first address to be used by this record.
: The address field and the data field are separated by a colon.
dd The actual data of this record. There can be 1 to 255 data bytes per record (see cc) All bytes in the record are separated from
each other (and the checksum) by a space.
ssss Data Checksum, adding all bytes of the data line together, forming a 16 bit checksum. Covers only all the data bytes of this
record.
Please note that there is no End Of File record defined.
Byte Count
The byte count cc counts the actual data bytes in the current record. Usually records have 16 data bytes. I don't know what the maximum
number of data bytes is. It depends on the size of the data buffer in the EMON52.
Address Field
This is the address where the first data byte of the record should be stored. After storing that data byte, the address is incremented by
1 to point to the address for the next data byte of the record. And so on, until all data bytes are stored.
The address is represented by a 4 digit hex number (2 bytes), with the MSD first.
Data Field
The payload of the record is formed by the Data field. The number of data bytes expected is given by the Byte Count field.
Checksum
The checksum is a 16 bit result from adding all data bytes of the record together.
Size Multiplier
In general, binary data will expand in sized by approximately 3.8 times when represented with this format.
EXAMPLE
Here is an example of an EMON52 file:
10 0000:57 6F 77 21 20 44 69 64 20 79 6F 75 20 72 65 61 0564
10 0010:6C 6C 79 20 67 6F 20 74 68 72 6F 75 67 68 20 61 05E9
10 0020:6C 6C 20 74 68 69 73 20 74 72 6F 75 62 6C 65 20 05ED
10 0030:74 6F 20 72 65 61 64 20 74 68 69 73 20 73 74 72 05F0
04 0040:69 6E 67 21 015F
SEE ALSO
http://sbprojects.fol.nl/knowledge/fileformats/emon52.htm
AUTHOR
This man page was taken from the above Web page. It was written by San Bergmans <sanmail@bigfoot.com>
Reference Manual SRecord srec_emon52(5)