Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Help with sort command
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Help with sort command Post 302589081 by Yoda on Tuesday 10th of January 2012 06:52:18 PM
Old 01-10-2012
Thanks, that helped Smilie
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help with the Sort command

Can someone please tell me how to sort a file, based on a particular position within the file? I have a line sequential file that is 152 bytes per record, in which i need to sort the file based on the numeric data in positions 142-152. I have done the "man sort" command and see the -k option... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rjjenkin
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sort command

Hi, I am going to sort a huge flat file using sort command, this file is about 36 million lines, 179 fields delimitered by Ctrl B (002). eg. 1^B198709..... 17^B200301.... 3^B196511.... ..... I want this file being sorted by the first field, the result is like : 1^B198709........ (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: xli
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sort command...

Hi IŽd like to get a few explanations about how the sort command works when cascading the options. cscyabl@comet:(develop)> more file 2:A2 2:A1 5:A2 5:A2 10:A1 cscyabl@comet:(develop)> sort -n -u file 2:A1 5:A2 10:A1 cscyabl@comet:(develop)> sort -u -n file 2:A1 5:A2 10:A1... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Indalecio
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help with sort command

Hi i have a file containing ip addresses and want to sort those IP addresses in the ascending order. file (match.txt) contents are: 192.168.0.100 192.168.0.16 192.168.0.10 192.168.0.23 192.168.0.2 192.168.0.3 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.222 i tried: sort -n match.txt output is :... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: manmeet
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to Sort Floating Numbers Using the Sort Command?

Hi to all. I'm trying to sort this with the Unix command sort. user1:12345678:3.5:2.5:8:1:2:3 user2:12345679:4.5:3.5:8:1:3:2 user3:12345687:5.5:2.5:6:1:3:2 user4:12345670:5.5:2.5:5:3:2:1 user5:12345671:2.5:5.5:7:2:3:1 I need to get this: user3:12345687:5.5:2.5:6:1:3:2... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: daniel.gbaena
7 Replies

6. Homework & Coursework Questions

Sort command

I have file ipaddress.txt 192.168.1.25 127.3.9.12 192.168.12.1 127.21.2.3 127.92.80.6 192.168.4.5 I want to sort as 127.3.9.12 127.21.2.3 127.92.80.6 192.168.1.25 192.168.12.1 192.168.4.5 So what sort command do I have to use. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: RiderOnsky
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Is it Possible to sort a list of hexadecimal numbers using "sort" command?

Hello Everybody :) !!!. i have question in mind, is it possible to sort a list of hexadecimal numbers using "sort" command? (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kesavan
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help to sort out... Possible use of sort command

I have an input like 4.3.6.66 4.3.6.67 4.3.6.70 4.3.6.25 4.3.6.15 4.3.6.54 4.3.6.44 4.3.6.34 4.3.6.24 4.3.6.14 4.3.6.53 4.3.6.43 4.3.6.49 4.3.6.33 4.3.6.52 4.3.6.19 4.3.6.58 4.3.6.42 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dnam9917
5 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Sort Command

Hi All, I have used sort -k1 -n data.txt > output.txt command on a large text data file with over 1,000,000 rows. The command managed to sort the data but the code did not read data according to sequence of occurrence. Given below are the first five lines of the data I need to sort; 1 1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Theo Score
2 Replies
URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)

NAME
URI::Find::Delimited - Find URIs which may be wrapped in enclosing delimiters. DESCRIPTION
Works like URI::Find, but is prepared for URIs in your text to be wrapped in a pair of delimiters and optionally have a title. This will be useful for processing text that already has some minimal markup in it, like bulletin board posts or wiki text. SYNOPSIS
my $finder = URI::Find::Delimited->new; my $text = "This is a [http://the.earth.li/ titled link]."; $finder->find($text); print $text; METHODS
new my $finder = URI::Find::Delimited->new( callback => &callback, delimiter_re => [ '[', ']' ], ignore_quoted => 1 # defaults to 0 ); All arguments are optional; defaults are provided (see below). Creates a new URI::Find::Delimited object. This object works similarly to a URI::Find object, but as well as just looking for URIs it is also aware of the concept of a wrapped, titled URI. These look something like [http://foo.com/ the foo website] where: * "[" is the opening delimiter * "]" is the closing delimiter * "http://foo.com/" is the URI * "the foo website" is the title * the URI and title are separated by spaces and/or tabs The URI::Find::Delimited object will extract each of these parts separately and pass them to your callback. callback "callback" is a function which is called on each URI found. It is passed five arguments: the opening delimiter (if found), the closing delimiter (if found), the URI, the title (if found), and any whitespace found between the URI and title. The return value of the callback will replace the original URI in the text. If you do not supply your own callback, the object will create a default one which will put your URIs in 'a href' tags using the URI for the target and the title for the link text. If no title is provided for a URI then the URI itself will be used as the title. If the delimiters aren't balanced (eg if the opening one is present but no closing one is found) then the URI is treated as not being wrapped. Note: the default callback will not remove the delimiters from the text. It should be simple enough to write your own callback to remove them, based on the one in the source, if that's what you want. In fact there's an example in this distribution, in "t/delimited.t". delimiter_re The "delimiter_re" parameter is optional. If you do supply it then it should be a ref to an array containing two regexes. It defaults to using single square brackets as the delimiters. Don't use capturing groupings "( )" in your delimiters or things will break. Use non-capturing "(?: )" instead. ignore_quoted If the "ignore_quoted" parameter is supplied and set to a true value, then any URIs immediately preceded with a double-quote char- acter will not be matched, ie your callback will not be executed for them and they'll be treated just as normal text. This is kinda lame but it's in here because I need to be able to ignore things like <img src="http://foo.com/bar.gif"> A better implementation may happen at some point. SEE ALSO
URI::Find. AUTHOR
Kake Pugh (kake@earth.li). COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Kake Pugh. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. CREDITS
Tim Bagot helped me stop faffing over the name, by pointing out that RFC 2396 Appendix E uses "delimited". Dave Hinton helped me fix the regex to make it work for delimited URIs with no title. Nick Cleaton helped me make "ignore_quoted" work. Some of the code was taken from URI::Find. perl v5.8.8 2008-03-01 URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:07 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy