Hello,
I am trying to parse a file that resembles the last three groupings into something looking like the first two lines. I've fiddled with sed and awk a bit, but can't get anything to work properly. I need them separated by some delimiter. The file is some 23,000 lines of the stuff....
... (9 Replies)
witam
potrzebuje polecenia porownujacego koumny na podstawie n-ostatnich znakow danej linnijki tj
mam 2 koumny AiB zawierajace ciag dowolnych znakow (dlugosci w kazdej linijce mga byc rozne wiec uzycie substra odpada)
A B
ewewewabc nbgujnnabc... (3 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a file in this format (like a matrix)
- A B C .. X
A 1 4 2 .. 2
B 2 6 4 .. 8
C 3 5 5 .. 4
. . . ... .
X . . ... .
and want to convert it into a file with this format:
A A = 1
A B = 4
A C = 2
...
A X = 2
B A = 2
B B = 6
etc (2 Replies)
hello all,
i have an input file like that
A A X0
A B X1
A C X2
...
A Z Xx
B A X1
B B X3
....
Z A Xx
Z B X4
and i want to have an output like that
A B C D
A X0 X1 X2 Xy
B X1 X3 X4 (4 Replies)
Hello all,
I have a file which is tab separated like that:
PHE_205_A TIP_127_W ARG_150_B
MET_1150_A TIP_12_W VAL_11_B
GLU_60_A TIP_130_W ARG_143_B
LEU_1033_A TIP_203_W ARG_14_B
SER_1092_A TIP_203_W
THR_1090_A TIP_203_W
SER_1092_A TIP_25_W ... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have created a tab separated file from the following input file.
ADDRESS1 CITY STATE POSTAL COUNTRY LON LAT
32 PRINZREGENTENSTRASSE ROSENHEIM BAYERN 83022 DEU 1212182 4785699
263 VIA DANTE ALIGHIERI BARI PUGLIA 70122 ITA 1686233 4112154
30 VIA MILANO ... (1 Reply)
I searched a lot considering this theme,but still cant make my code working.
I have two tab separated files, I want to do the following thing:
File 1:
xx1 y yy
xx2 y yy
xx3 y yy
xx4 y yy
File 2:
xx1 z1
xx2 z2
xx3 z3
xx4 z4
xx5 z5
So I want to merge them ,according to... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I have a tab separated. I want to replace all the "&" in 8th column of the file with "and" .I am trying with
awk -F, -vOFS=\\t '{$8=($8=="&")?"and":$8}1' test> test1.txt
My file is abc def ghk hjk lkm hgb jkluy acvf & bhj hihuhu fgg
me mine he her go went has has & had hgf hgy
... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I'm trying to read a tab separated file and apply some functions on each column. I have an issue with empty column.
Exemple:
$ #cat with the sed to allow you to see my tab
$ cat foo.txt| sed 's/\t/;/g'
a;1;x
b;;yI wanted to something like that:
while read col1 col2 col3
do
... (4 Replies)
In the gawk below, I am trying to output the file tab-deliminated but don't think that is the correct syntax. Thank you :).
gawk OFS='/t' '{sub(/-+/,"",$2); ar=$0}
END{n = asort(ar)
for (i = 1; i <= n; i++)
print ar}' file (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
netmasks
netmasks(4) File Formats netmasks(4)NAME
netmasks - network mask database
SYNOPSIS
/etc/inet/netmasks
/etc/netmasks
DESCRIPTION
The netmasks file contains network masks used to implement IP subnetting. It supports both standard subnetting as specified in RFC-950 and
variable length subnetting as specified in RFC-1519. When using standard subnetting there should be a single line for each network that is
subnetted in this file with the network number, any number of SPACE or TAB characters, and the network mask to use on that network. Network
numbers and masks may be specified in the conventional IP `.' (dot) notation (like IP host addresses, but with zeroes for the host part).
For example,
128.32.0.0 255.255.255.0
can be used to specify that the Class B network 128.32.0.0 should have eight bits of subnet field and eight bits of host field, in addition
to the standard sixteen bits in the network field.
When using variable length subnetting, the format is identical. However, there should be a line for each subnet with the first field being
the subnet and the second field being the netmask that applies to that subnet. The users of the database, such as ifconfig(1M), perform a
lookup to find the longest possible matching mask. It is possible to combine the RFC-950 and RFC-1519 form of subnet masks in the net-
masks file. For example,
128.32.0.0 255.255.255.0
128.32.27.0 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.16 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.32 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.48 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.64 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.80 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.96 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.112 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.128 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.144 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.160 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.176 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.192 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.208 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.224 255.255.255.240
128.32.27.240 255.255.255.240
128.32.64.0 255.255.255.192
can be used to specify different netmasks in different parts of the 128.32.0.0 Class B network number. Addresses 128.32.27.0 through
128.32.27.255 have a subnet mask with 28 bits in the combined network and subnet fields (often referred to as the subnet field) and 4 bits
in the host field. Furthermore, addresses 128.32.64.0 through 128.32.64.63 have a 26 bits in the subnet field. Finally, all other
addresses in the range 128.32.0.0 through 128.32.255.255 have a 24 bit subnet field.
Invalid entries are ignored.
SEE ALSO ifconfig(1M), inet(7P)
Postel, Jon, and Mogul, Jeff, Internet Standard Subnetting Procedure, RFC 950, Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park,
Calif., August 1985.
V. Fuller, T. Li, J. Yu, K. Varadhan, Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy, RFC 1519,
Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., September 1993.
T. Pummill, B. Manning, Variable Length Subnet Table For IPv4, RFC 1878, Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif.,
December 1995.
NOTES
/etc/inet/netmasks is the official SVr4 name of the netmasks file. The symbolic link /etc/netmasks exists for BSD compatibility.
SunOS 5.10 7 Jan 1997 netmasks(4)