Hi,
In my korn shell script, I want to delete some particular text from a certain file...How can this be done? Is the below right?
ed $NAMES << EOF
echo "" > /dev/null
echo "${x} = " > /dev/null
echo "name = " > /dev/null
echo "adress = " > /dev/null
w
q
EOF (1 Reply)
Need to delete a text block inside a file, that is marked with a start and an end pattern. Eg
do not delete
not delete
<tag1>
delete everything here
here
and here
and here...
<tag2>
do not delete
do not delete....
Believe sed is able to do this job but don't get it working.
... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone,
I have text files that I want to delete lines from. I have searched through this forum for quite some time and found examples of both awk and sed. Unfortunately, I was not able to successfully do what I want. Well to some extent. I did manage to delete the first 15 lines from each... (5 Replies)
Say I have a file with a bunch of config blocks (see below) in a file. If I send a variable to the function, how can I remove that block of text?
define host{
host abc
description testserver
}
define host{
host xzy
description prodserver
}
So in the example... (3 Replies)
In my command prompt I did:
sed 's/\://' mytextfile > newtextfile
But it only deleted the first instance of : in each line when some lines have multiple : appearing in each one. How can I delete all the : from the entire file? (1 Reply)
I have a text file that looks like this:
I want to delete the last character of first column in all rows so that my output looks like this:
Thanks a lot! (1 Reply)
I know this is a complicated question but I will try to illustrate it with some data. I have a data file that looks like the following:
1341 NA06985 0 0 2 46.6432798439
1341 NA06991 NA06993 NA06985 2 48.8478948517
1341 NA06993 0 0 1 45.8022601455
1340 NA06994 0 0 1 48.780669145
1340... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a fat file which contains something like this:
************************************************
blahblahblah
blahblahblah
Myobject1 HOME (
homecontents01 (
some junk;
)
home contents02(
some junk;
)
... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I have a list of words separated by spaces I am trying to delete from a text file, and I could not figure out what is the best way to do this.
what I tried (does not work) :
delete="password key number verify"
arr=($delete)
for i in arr
{
sed "s/\<${arr}\>]*//g" in.txt
}
>... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hawk4520
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
h5jam
h5jam(1) General Commands Manual h5jam(1)NAME
h5jam - Add a user block to a HDF5 file
SYNOPSIS
h5jam -u user_block -i in_file.h5 [-o out_file.h5] [--clobber]
DESCRIPTION
h5jam concatenates a user_block file and an HDF5 file to create an HDF5 file with a user block. The user block can be either binary or
text. The output file is padded so that the HDF5 header begins on byte 512, 1024, etc.. (See the HDF5 File Format.)
If out_file.h5 is given, a new file is created with the user_block followed by the contents of in_file.h5. In this case, infile.h5 is
unchanged.
If out_file.h5 is not specified, the user_block is added to in_file.h5.
If in_file.h5 already has a user block, the contents of user_block will be added to the end of the existing user block, and the file
shifted to the next boundary. If --clobber is set, any existing user block will be overwritten.
EXAMPLE USAGE
Create new file, newfile.h5, with the text in file mytext.txt as the user block for the HDF5 file file.h5.
h5jam -u mytext.txt -i file.h5 -o newfile.h5
Add text in file mytext.txt to front of HDF5 dataset, file.h5.
h5jam -u mytext.txt -i file.h5
Overwrite the user block (if any) in file.h5 with the contents of mytext.txt.
h5jam -u mytext.txt -i file.h5 --clobber
RETURN VALUE
h5jam returns the size of the output file, or -1 if an error occurs.
CAVEATS
This tool copies all the data (sequentially) in the file(s) to new offsets. For a large file, this copy will take a long time.
The most efficient way to create a user block is to create the file with a user block (see H5Pset_user_block), and write the user block
data into that space from a program.
The user block is completely opaque to the HDF5 library and to the h5jam and h5unjam tools. The user block is simply read or written as a
string of bytes, which could be text or any kind of binary data. It is up to the user to know what the contents of the user block means
and how to process it.
When the user block is extracted, all the data is written to the output, including any padding or unwritten data.
This tool moves the HDF5 file through byte copies, i.e., it does not read or interpret the HDF5 objects.
SEE ALSO h5dump(1), h5ls(1), h5diff(1), h5import(1), gif2h5(1), h52gif(1), h5perf(1), h5unjam(1).
h5jam(1)