my file looks like this:
101928 101943
101928 101944
101929 101943
101929 101943
101929 102044
i want to insert bc to get answer like this:
101928 101943 000015
101928 101944 000016
101929 101943 000013
101929 101943 000014
101929 102044 000115
total 000173
my... (3 Replies)
Hello people,
awk '{print $0}' input1.txt input2.txt |sort -u
Will give the union of the 2 files. Similarly what is command to get just the diff data (i.e minus) of the 2 files. Can I use the "diff" command to get just the diff data.
Please let me know.
Regards,
Tipsy. (7 Replies)
I need to rename a directory full of files named like:
page_001.jpg
page_002.jpg
page_003.jpg
to the file name minus one. Meaning instead of page_001.jpg that file becomes page_000.jpg so:
page_001.jpg => page_000.jpg
page_002.jpg => page_001.jpg
page_003.jpg => page_002.jpg
I was... (3 Replies)
In Redhat it is easy....
date --date="60 minutes ago"
How do you do this in Solaris?
I got creative and got the epoch time but had problems..
EPOCHTIME=`truss date 2>&1 | grep "time()" | awk '{print $3 - 900}'`
echo $EPOCHTIME
TIME=`perl -e 'print scalar(localtime("$EPOCHTIME")),... (5 Replies)
Hi there,
I have a problem with arithmetic ops in awk.
Here is what my script does right now.
while read nr val ; do
case $nr in
400) awk '$2~/eigenvectors/ {print $NF-'$val'};' input.txt >> output.txt;;
esac
done < frames.txtI have a file named frames.txt with two columns (nr and... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need to subtract 5 minutes from the date. Example
$date +"%Y-%m-%d-%H.%M.%S" displays 2014-06-26-06.06.38
I want to show it as 2014-06-26-06.01.38 (5 mins are subtracted from date)
Any help would be appreciated. I am currently on AIX version 6.1
-Vrushank (10 Replies)
Hi the below code is failing i am trying to generate do the following:
2014-10-22 11:26:00 (Substract 24 hrs)
should produce
2014-10-21 11:26:00
I need the same formatting below because that gets inputted into code for an... (4 Replies)
Hello,
date --date '-60 min ago' +'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S,%3N'
Above command gives the date and time minus 60 minutes
but the problem i am facing is, i do not want to hardcode the value 60
it is stored in a variable var=60
now if i run below command , i get error
date --date '-$var min... (3 Replies)
Hello Folks,
I have a variable output holding date as below -
output = "20141220"
I need to extract a day out of it and store it in another variable i.e. something similar to below -
output1=20141219"
and if the month is changing i.e. date in on 31st or 1st it should be taken care of
"date... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ektubbe
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
sdiff
sdiff(1) General Commands Manual sdiff(1)NAME
sdiff - Compares two files and displays the differences in a side-by-side format
SYNOPSIS
sdiff [-l | -s] [-w number] [-o output_file] file1 file2
The sdiff command reads file1 and file2, uses diff to compare them, and writes the results to standard output in a side-by-side format.
OPTIONS
Displays only the left side when lines are identical. Creates a third file, output_file, by a controlled interactive line-by-line merging
of file1 and file2. The following subcommands govern the creation of this file: Adds the left side to output_file. Adds the right side to
output_file. Stops displaying identical lines. Begins displaying identical lines. Enters ed with the left side, the right side, both
sides, or an empty file, respectively.
Each time you exit from ed, sdiff writes the resulting edited file to the end of output_file. If you fail to save the changes
before exiting, sdiff writes the initial input to output_file. Exits the interactive session. Suppresses display of identical
lines. Sets the width of the output line to number (130 characters by default).
DESCRIPTION
The sdiff command displays each line of the two files with a series of spaces between them if the lines are identical, a < (left angle
bracket) in the field of spaces if the line only exists in file1, a > (right angle bracket) if the line only exists in file2, and a | (ver-
tical bar) for lines that are different.
When you specify the -o option, sdiff produces a third file by merging file1 and file2 according to your instructions.
Note that the sdiff command invokes the diff -b command to compare two input files. The -b option causes the diff command to ignore trail-
ing spaces, tab characters, and consider other strings of spaces as equal.
EXAMPLES
To print a comparison of two files, enter: sdiff chap1.bak chap1
This displays a side-by-side listing that compares each line of chap1.bak and chap1. To display only the lines that differ, enter:
sdiff -s-w 80 chap1.bak chap1
This displays the differences at the tty. The -w 80 sets page width to 80 columns. The -s option tells sdiff not to display lines
that are identical in both files. To selectively combine parts of two files, enter: sdiff -s-w 80 -o chap1.combo chap1.bak
chap1
This combines chap1.bak and chap1 into a new file called chap1.combo. For each group of differing lines, sdiff asks you which group
to keep or whether you want to edit them using ed.
SEE ALSO
Commands: diff(1), ed(1)sdiff(1)