Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers how to read the second word of a text file Post 302571935 by venu on Tuesday 8th of November 2011 03:52:20 PM
Old 11-08-2011
how to read the second word of a text file

Folks,
how to read the second word of the first line from a text file. Text file does not have any delimiters in the line and has words at random locations. Basically the text file is a log and i want to capture a number that is in second position.


Appreciate your help

Venu
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to read each word in a file

Hi, I want to read each word in a file. start at a particular character say '%' and read till another character say ')' (these two characters form the part of my file). then i want to delete the whole sentence(that is between '%' and ')' ) and keep the remaining file intact. Its urgent... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kaps_jhaver
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Can a shell script pull the first word (or nth word) off each line of a text file?

Greetings. I am struggling with a shell script to make my life simpler, with a number of practical ways in which it could be used. I want to take a standard text file, and pull the 'n'th word from each line such as the first word from a text file. I'm struggling to see how each line can be... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tricky
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read each word from File1 and search each file in file2

file1: has all words to be searched. 100007 200999 299997 File2: has all file names to be searched. C:\search1.txt C:\search2.txt C:\search3.txt C:\search4.txt Outfile: should have all found lines. Logic: Read each word in file1 and search each file in the list of File2; if the... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: clem2610
8 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Read last word of file name

Hi I am writing a script that needs to read all file from a directory and print only last word of all file names. My script: for file in /documents/files/ do $shortFile=$(file##.*) echo $shortFile done All my file names in /document/files/ directory are like unix_ubuntu but I need to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: watsup
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

To read data word by word from given file & storing in variables

File having data in following format : file name : file.txt -------------------- 111111;name1 222222;name2 333333;name3 I want to read this file so that I can split these into two paramaters i.e. 111111 & name1 into two different variables(say value1 & value2). i.e val1=11111 &... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sjoshi98
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to read nth word from delimited text file?

Hi i am new in scripting how i can get 2 elements from first line of delimited txt file in shell scripts. AA~101010~0~AB~8000~ABC0~ BB~101011~0~BC~8000~ABC~ CC~101012~0~CD~8000~ABC0~ DD~101013~0~AB~8000~ABC~ AA~101014~0~BC~8000~ABC0~ CC~101015~0~CD~8000~ABC~ can anyone plse help?... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sushine11
3 Replies

7. Programming

How can I read complete word from text file?

how can I know that the word in test file end at this point .... I have an Idea to search on ' ' , '\n' or '\0' but don't know what function can store the string before those characters .. help please ! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: fwrlfo
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read a File line by line and split into array word by word

Hi All, Hope you guys had a wonderful weekend I have a scenario where in which I have to read a file line by line and check for few words before redirecting to a file I have searched the forum but,either those answers dint work (perhaps because of my wrong under standing of how IFS... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kingcobra
6 Replies

9. Programming

C Code to read a word from file

Hello All, I have to write a C Code to read a word from file and Keep track of the number of word occurrence in each line and total in the file. Maintaining total count is easier but maintaining per line count is what I am struggling to achieve. I thought of maintaining linked list... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anand.shah
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read a file and save every word in a variable to use

Hello there so i have a txt file containing word like "one two three four plus four five six". I want to save every word in the file into a variable, and then use that variable to generate real numbers and apply the arithmetic value on them. example: the txt files becomes 123 + 456 and... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: azaiiez
10 Replies
Text::ParseWords(3pm)					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide				     Text::ParseWords(3pm)

NAME
Text::ParseWords - parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays SYNOPSIS
use Text::ParseWords; @lists = nested_quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines); @words = quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines); @words = shellwords(@lines); @words = parse_line($delim, $keep, $line); @words = old_shellwords(@lines); # DEPRECATED! DESCRIPTION
The &nested_quotewords() and &quotewords() functions accept a delimiter (which can be a regular expression) and a list of lines and then breaks those lines up into a list of words ignoring delimiters that appear inside quotes. &quotewords() returns all of the tokens in a single long list, while &nested_quotewords() returns a list of token lists corresponding to the elements of @lines. &parse_line() does tokenizing on a single string. The &*quotewords() functions simply call &parse_line(), so if you're only splitting one line you can call &parse_line() directly and save a function call. The $keep argument is a boolean flag. If true, then the tokens are split on the specified delimiter, but all other characters (quotes, backslashes, etc.) are kept in the tokens. If $keep is false then the &*quotewords() functions remove all quotes and backslashes that are not themselves backslash-escaped or inside of single quotes (i.e., &quotewords() tries to interpret these characters just like the Bourne shell). NB: these semantics are significantly different from the original version of this module shipped with Perl 5.000 through 5.004. As an additional feature, $keep may be the keyword "delimiters" which causes the functions to preserve the delimiters in each string as tokens in the token lists, in addition to preserving quote and backslash characters. &shellwords() is written as a special case of &quotewords(), and it does token parsing with whitespace as a delimiter-- similar to most Unix shells. EXAMPLES
The sample program: use Text::ParseWords; @words = quotewords('s+', 0, q{this is "a test" of quotewords "for you}); $i = 0; foreach (@words) { print "$i: <$_> "; $i++; } produces: 0: <this> 1: <is> 2: <a test> 3: <of quotewords> 4: <"for> 5: <you> demonstrating: 0 a simple word 1 multiple spaces are skipped because of our $delim 2 use of quotes to include a space in a word 3 use of a backslash to include a space in a word 4 use of a backslash to remove the special meaning of a double-quote 5 another simple word (note the lack of effect of the backslashed double-quote) Replacing "quotewords('s+', 0, q{this is...})" with "shellwords(q{this is...})" is a simpler way to accomplish the same thing. SEE ALSO
Text::CSV - for parsing CSV files AUTHORS
Maintainer: Alexandr Ciornii <alexchornyATgmail.com>. Previous maintainer: Hal Pomeranz <pomeranz@netcom.com>, 1994-1997 (Original author unknown). Much of the code for &parse_line() (including the primary regexp) from Joerk Behrends <jbehrends@multimediaproduzenten.de>. Examples section another documentation provided by John Heidemann <johnh@ISI.EDU> Bug reports, patches, and nagging provided by lots of folks-- thanks everybody! Special thanks to Michael Schwern <schwern@envirolink.org> for assuring me that a &nested_quotewords() would be useful, and to Jeff Friedl <jfriedl@yahoo-inc.com> for telling me not to worry about error-checking (sort of-- you had to be there). POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below: Around line 250: Expected text after =item, not a number Around line 254: Expected text after =item, not a number Around line 258: Expected text after =item, not a number Around line 262: Expected text after =item, not a number Around line 266: Expected text after =item, not a number perl v5.18.2 2014-01-06 Text::ParseWords(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:02 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy