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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting generate report based on data in files. Post 302557207 by neutronscott on Tuesday 20th of September 2011 03:29:13 PM
Old 09-20-2011
Maybe something with awk:

Code:
echo "11-SEP-2001 08:46:00" | awk '{ if (match($0, "[0-3][0-9]-[[:alpha:]][[:alpha:]][[:alpha:]]-[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9] ..:..:..$")) print "OK" }'

Or even egrep?

Code:
[mute@geek ~]$ echo "11-SEP-2001 08:46:00" | egrep -q '^..-...-.... ..:..:..$'; echo $?
0

Edit to suit..
 

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ximtoppm(1)						      General Commands Manual						       ximtoppm(1)

NAME
ximtoppm - convert an Xim file into a portable pixmap SYNOPSIS
ximtoppm [--alphaout={alpha-filename,-}] [ximfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads an Xim file as input. Produces a portable pixmap as output. The Xim toolkit is included in the contrib tree of the X.V11R4 release. OPTIONS
--alphaout=alpha-filename ximtoppm creates a PGM (portable graymap) file containing the alpha channel values in the input image. If the input image doesn't contain an alpha channel, the alpha-filename file contains all zero (transparent) alpha values. If you don't specify --alphaout, ximtoppm does not generate an alpha file, and if the input image has an alpha channel, ximtoppm simply discards it. If you specify - as the filename, ximtoppm writes the alpha output to Standard Output and discards the image. Actually, an Xim image can contain an arbitrary fourth channel -- it need not be an Alpha channel. ximtoppm extracts any fourth channel it finds as described above; it doesn't matter if it is an alpha channel or not. See pnmcomp(1) for one way to use the alpha output file. All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. SEE ALSO
pnmcomp(1), ppm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1991 by Jef Poskanzer. April 2, 2000 ximtoppm(1)
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