---------- Post updated at 12:15 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:06 PM ----------
As far as I am aware the / has nothing to do with it as I am using the -k wildcard which does it by position.
:/
As I said, I know this is an assignment, so if I just give you the answer, we'll both get into trouble and you won't learn anything. I can see you're actually trying (unlike most of our peers), but the fact remains that this is an assignment meant to test our abilities.
Look at what sort has to offer. -n offers a numerical sort (great for dates which have been chopped up...)
As I said previously to you, this is a huge hint now, make things easier for yourself and THINK about the order of your .csv file. Who said those details had to go in that order you've specified...
Yes, you will still need -k, too. But think about what it does.
Hi All,
I am having a pipe delimited file .In this file the 3rd column is having date values.I need to get the min date and max date from that file.
I have used
cut -d '|' test.dat -f 3|sort -u
But it is not sorting the date .How to sort the date column using unix commands
Thanks ... (4 Replies)
:cool:
Hi all,
I have a pecular issue in sorting these files in Solaris environment.
All the below files are modified on November 4th, but I want to sort these files as per date column (eg: 01May07_1623 = ddmmmyy_hhmm)
Nov 4 18:27 SONYELEC00.GI22973.01May07_1623.gpg
Nov 4 18:27... (4 Replies)
I want to sort alphabetically on the first field and sort in descending numerical order on the 2nd field. With a normal "sort -r -n" it does this:
abc ||| 5e-05 ||| bla
abc ||| 3 ||| ble
def ||| 1 ||| abc
def ||| 0.2 ||| def
As you can see it ignores the fact that 5e-05 is actually 0.00005... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a set of columns in a csv file, my first row being an integer and 2nd being a date. I want to first sort it using the first column and then by the second.
for e.g. i have ,
1234,09/05/2009,hi
5678,01/01/2008,hi
1234,11/03/2006,hello
5678,28/07/2010,hello
i tried this... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
Sorry the title is a mess, but did not find a better description at the time.
So here is my problem:
I have an input file:
8:Mass40s -- 0
48:Mass40s -- 0
67:Mass40s -- 0
86:Mass40s -- 0
105:Mass40s -- 0
9:Mass -- 1
49:Mass -- 86... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that has data in it that says
00:01:48.233 1212
00:01:56.233 345
00:09:01.221 5678
00:12:23.321 93444
The file has more line than this but i just wanted to put in a snippet to ask how I would get the highest number with time stamp into another file. So from the above... (2 Replies)
Hello Group,
I would like to sort the below file by date (first year then month and day) and I used the following command but it does not work
sort -n -t"/" -k3 -k1 -k2
"sample original file"
12/28/2009,1.0353
12/31/2009,1.0357
12/30/2009,1.0364
12/29/2009,1.0366
12/24/2009,1.0386... (6 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I have a filelist collected from another server , now want to sort the output using date/time stamp filed.
- Filed 6, 7,8 are showing the date/time/stamp.
Here is the input:
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
-rw------- 1 root ... (3 Replies)
I have a .CSV file (file.csv) whose data are all enclosed in double quotes. Sample format of the file is as below:
column1,column2,column3,column4,column5,column6, column7, Column8, Column9, Column10
"12","B000QRIGJ4","4432","string with quotes, and with a comma, and colon: in... (3 Replies)
I wanted to sort the below data on 4th field(comma seperator) based on month and date and time on AIX OS.
Input data:
3,AJ,30 Jul 06:30,30 Jul 06:30
5,AJ,30 Jul 06:30,30 Jul 06:49
10,AJ,30 Jul 06:30,02 Jan 05:41
4,AJ,30 Jul 06:30,30 Jul 06:36
2,AJ,30 Jul 06:30,28 Jul 06:45
9,AJ,30 Jul... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Amit Joshi
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
sort
SORT(1) User Commands SORT(1)NAME
sort - sort lines of text files
SYNOPSIS
sort [OPTION]... [FILE]...
sort [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
DESCRIPTION
Write sorted concatenation of all FILE(s) to standard output.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too. Ordering options:
-b, --ignore-leading-blanks
ignore leading blanks
-d, --dictionary-order
consider only blanks and alphanumeric characters
-f, --ignore-case
fold lower case to upper case characters
-g, --general-numeric-sort
compare according to general numerical value
-i, --ignore-nonprinting
consider only printable characters
-M, --month-sort
compare (unknown) < `JAN' < ... < `DEC'
-n, --numeric-sort
compare according to string numerical value
-R, --random-sort
sort by random hash of keys
--random-source=FILE
get random bytes from FILE (default /dev/urandom)
-r, --reverse
reverse the result of comparisons
--sort=WORD
sort according to WORD: general-numeric -g, month -M, numeric -n, random -R, version -V
-V, --version-sort
sort by numeric version
Other options:
--batch-size=NMERGE
merge at most NMERGE inputs at once; for more use temp files
-c, --check, --check=diagnose-first
check for sorted input; do not sort
-C, --check=quiet, --check=silent
like -c, but do not report first bad line
--compress-program=PROG
compress temporaries with PROG; decompress them with PROG -d
--files0-from=F
read input from the files specified by NUL-terminated names in file F; If F is - then read names from standard input
-k, --key=POS1[,POS2]
start a key at POS1 (origin 1), end it at POS2 (default end of line)
-m, --merge
merge already sorted files; do not sort
-o, --output=FILE
write result to FILE instead of standard output
-s, --stable
stabilize sort by disabling last-resort comparison
-S, --buffer-size=SIZE
use SIZE for main memory buffer
-t, --field-separator=SEP
use SEP instead of non-blank to blank transition
-T, --temporary-directory=DIR
use DIR for temporaries, not $TMPDIR or /tmp; multiple options specify multiple directories
-u, --unique
with -c, check for strict ordering; without -c, output only the first of an equal run
-z, --zero-terminated
end lines with 0 byte, not newline
--help display this help and exit
--version
output version information and exit
POS is F[.C][OPTS], where F is the field number and C the character position in the field; both are origin 1. If neither -t nor -b is in
effect, characters in a field are counted from the beginning of the preceding whitespace. OPTS is one or more single-letter ordering
options, which override global ordering options for that key. If no key is given, use the entire line as the key.
SIZE may be followed by the following multiplicative suffixes: % 1% of memory, b 1, K 1024 (default), and so on for M, G, T, P, E, Z, Y.
With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.
*** WARNING *** The locale specified by the environment affects sort order. Set LC_ALL=C to get the traditional sort order that uses
native byte values.
AUTHOR
Written by Mike Haertel and Paul Eggert.
REPORTING BUGS
Report sort bugs to bug-coreutils@gnu.org
GNU coreutils home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>
General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSO
The full documentation for sort is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and sort programs are properly installed at your site, the
command
info coreutils 'sort invocation'
should give you access to the complete manual.
GNU coreutils 7.1 July 2010 SORT(1)