I am writing a C program which a part of it needs to padding zero in front of a string. The program will get a sting from an ASCII file which the maxium length of this string is 5 char long. The string can sometimes less the 5 char long. In order to make it with the same length '0's are being... (3 Replies)
Hi
Can anyone tell me how to pad zeroes on the left side to a numeric string in unix shell scripting
Your answer is very much appreciated
Thanks
Vijay (2 Replies)
Is there a function in c that will allow me to pad variables?
I have an int that can't be longer than 10. I need to pad a numeric value with leading zeros
314
0000000314 (1 Reply)
Hi everybody,
I have a question about typesetting. I originally wrote a script for use with ksh and now I am on a system that I cannot modify, and it only has bash.
In the original script I just did typeset -RZ4 variable and it would add the leading zeros. In bash, it doesn't work.
I've... (2 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I would like to left pad with "0's" on first column say (width six)
I have a large file with the format:
FILE:
1: ALFRED 84378 NY
8385: JAMES 88385 FL
323: SMITH 00850 TX
My output needs to be like:
000001: ALFRED 84378 NY
008385: JAMES 88385 FL
000323: SMITH... (10 Replies)
hi All
i am new to linux...
source txt ..
281-BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
282-BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
83-BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
is it possible to use bash script to convert to
(remove the "-" and fill up to 4 digit" ?
0281 BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
0282 BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
0083 BUM-5M BUM-5M 0 0
thanks a ... (5 Replies)
Hi all
Is there a way to pad the output of a bash script
see that code below
for i in `sed -n '/Start Printer/,/End Printer/p' /u/ab/scripts/hosts.conf | awk '!/^#/ {print $2}' | egrep -v 'broke|primera' `; do
pages=`snmpget -Ov -v1 -c public $i sysLocation.0 | awk '{print $2}'`
... (3 Replies)
Hello people,
I am having problem to sort, sed and zero padding of column in csv file.
7th column only.
Input of csv file:
1,2,3,4,5,6,4/1/2010 12:00 AM,8
1,2,3,4,5,6,3/11/2010 9:39 AM,8
1,2,3,4,5,6,5/12/2011 3:43 PM,8
1,2,3,4,5,6,12/20/2009 7:23 PM,8
Output:... (5 Replies)
I have this csv file that I would like to sort on the 20th and 21st field. They are high lighted below. My challenge is that when I sort on those fields they are not in order as I would have liked. It seems like I have to pad those fields to the longest value in that fields data.
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: GroveTuckey
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
seq
SEQ(1) BSD General Commands Manual SEQ(1)NAME
seq -- print sequences of numbers
SYNOPSIS
seq [-w] [-f format] [-s string] [-t string] [first [incr]] last
DESCRIPTION
The seq utility prints a sequence of numbers, one per line (default), from first (default 1), to near last as possible, in increments of incr
(default 1). When first is larger than last, the default incr is -1.
All numbers are interpreted as floating point.
Normally integer values are printed as decimal integers.
The seq utility accepts the following options:
-f format Use a printf(3) style format to print each number. Only the A, a, E, e, F, f, G, g, and % conversion characters are valid,
along with any optional flags and an optional numeric minimum field width or precision. The format can contain character
escape sequences in backslash notation as defined in ANSI X3.159-1989 (``ANSI C89''). The default is %g.
-s string Use string to separate numbers. The string can contain character escape sequences in backslash notation as defined in ANSI
X3.159-1989 (``ANSI C89''). The default is
.
-t string Use string to terminate sequence of numbers. The string can contain character escape sequences in backslash notation as
defined in ANSI X3.159-1989 (``ANSI C89''). This option is useful when the default separator does not contain a
.
-w Equalize the widths of all numbers by padding with zeros as necessary. This option has no effect with the -f option. If any
sequence numbers will be printed in exponential notation, the default conversion is changed to %e.
EXIT STATUS
The seq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
# seq 1 3
1
2
3
# seq 3 1
3
2
1
# seq -w 0 .05 .1
0.00
0.05
0.10
SEE ALSO jot(1), printf(1), printf(3)HISTORY
The seq command first appeared in Plan 9 from Bell Labs. A seq command appeared in NetBSD 3.0, and ported to FreeBSD 9.0. This command was
based on the command of the same name in Plan 9 from Bell Labs and the GNU core utilities. The GNU seq command first appeared in the 1.13
shell utilities release.
BUGS
The -w option does not handle the transition from pure floating point to exponent representation very well. The seq command is not bug for
bug compatible with the Plan 9 from Bell Labs or GNU versions of seq.
BSD September 10, 2013 BSD