hi All,
Thi sis very urgent.
I have large files with pipe delimited.
For example:
1.txt
1001024|120|9|-0.0|#|
1001025|120|9|#|
1001026|120|9|#|
1001032|120|2|-0.0|#|
1002026|110|9|#|
1002027|110|9|-0.0|#|
1002028|120|1|1.0|#|
I need to replace the 4th filed if it is # by |-|
my... (2 Replies)
I have a input file that has some common values in 1st,2nd and 3rd columns. 4th and 5th are different. Now I would like to print the mean of the fourth column of similar values in 1st.2nd and 3rd columns along with all the values in 5th column.
input
NM_0 1.22 CR5 0.4 n_21663... (10 Replies)
HELLO! This is my first post here! By the way, I think it is great that people do this.
My question:
I have two files, one is a .dilm and one is a .txt. It is my understanding that the .dilm file can be treated as a .txt file. I wrote another program where I was able to manipulate it as if it... (3 Replies)
I have this space delimited large text file with more than 1,000,000+ columns and about 100 rows. I want to delete all the columns that start with NA such that:
File before modification
aa bb cc NA100 dd
aa b1 c2 NA101 de
File after modification
aa bb cc dd
aa b1 c2 de
How would I... (3 Replies)
Hi group,
Can you please tell how to delete specific columns from a file.
I know something like
awk -F, '{ print $1" "$2" "15 }' input.txt > output.txt will delete all other columns. But this is in a way to copy some particular columns.
But is there any other way to select just some... (11 Replies)
I am trying to find a specific set of characters in a long file. I only want to find the characters in column 265 for 4 bytes.
Is there a search for that? I tried cut but couldn't get it to work.
Ex. I want to find '9999' in column 265 for 4 bytes. If it is in there, I want it to print... (12 Replies)
Hi
I have a file which is tab-delimited. Now, I'd like to print the lines which have "chr6" string in both first and second columns. Could anybody help? (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'd like to intersect two files by the 4th col of the first file and 6th col of the second file. This is the code I use:
awk 'NR==FNR{A;next}$6 File1 File2
However, this is only outputting the second file lines. I'd like to have both lines in a single line separated by a tab.
Thanks in... (25 Replies)
I am trying to search a list of strings from a file and display the string as well as the column in the search file it was found. I dont care about the row. what is wrong with my script?
while read line; do awk -v var="$line" '{for(i=1;i<NF;i++) if ($NF==$var) break; print $var FS $NF' }'... (3 Replies)
i have a file (csv or txt or anything which has 4 columns (id,name,number,location) and it contains data. i want to convert the data of specific columns like name to ooooo and number to 88888 matching the field length of that columns.
for example
if name column has
anthony which is 7, it should... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: prajaktaraut
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
comm
COMM(1) BSD General Commands Manual COMM(1)NAME
comm -- select or reject lines common to two files
SYNOPSIS
comm [-123f] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
The comm utility reads file1 and file2, which should be sorted lexically, and produces three text columns as output: lines only in file1;
lines only in file2; and lines in both files.
The filename ``-'' means the standard input.
The following options are available:
-1 Suppress printing of column 1.
-2 Suppress printing of column 2.
-3 Suppress printing of column 3.
-f Fold case in line comparisons.
Each column will have a number of tab characters prepended to it equal to the number of lower numbered columns that are being printed. For
example, if column number two is being suppressed, lines printed in column number one will not have any tabs preceding them, and lines
printed in column number three will have one.
comm assumes that the files are lexically sorted; all characters participate in line comparisons.
EXIT STATUS
comm exits 0 on success, >0 if an error occurred.
SEE ALSO cmp(1), diff(1), sort(1), uniq(1)STANDARDS
The comm utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2'').
BSD June 6, 1993 BSD