I man a command and save it in a file. ftp to pc. but when i displayed it. it has some repeat and funny characters. how can i get rid of it?
eg.
$ man ls > lsman
then use ftp transfer the file from unix to pc.
open file laman. it has some thing like
NNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE
repeat letters... (4 Replies)
Does anyone of you know how to turn off color and weird characters on bash shell when using the command "script"? Everytime users on my server used that command to record their script, they either couldn't print it because lp kept giving the "unknown format character" messages or the print paper... (1 Reply)
Hi Friends,
we have recently installed RHEL4.4 and when i give the commd
ls -l > tt it prints the file name with some special charactes like
^[[00m1 in the begining of the file name and at the end of the file name. I wanted to use the file names of removing it before taking
the backup and... (4 Replies)
Hi!
So i've got this shell script that asks questions and the user is required to input answers. The answers typed are bold.
sh-*.*$ sh filename dir
cat question
tput bold
read ans
tput sgr0
... and so on
tput sgr0
exit
So when the script ends i don't get the bold characters... (3 Replies)
I have a database script that always produces the following output:
0
btw, the unwanted character looks like a square on a unix system. it doesn't look like the above quote.
how can I get rid of it and only keep the "0"?
---------- Post updated at 01:57 PM ---------- Previous update was... (2 Replies)
Hi!
Could anyone so kindly help me a code to eliminate from a txt file, obtained by collecting and merge several web-page, every word (string) containing non alphabetical, numeric and punctuation character (i.e NON a-zA-Z0-9, underscore and punctuation mark)?
Thanks a lot for the help to... (5 Replies)
When I use vi to see what's in the file I get this:
int add1(int x) {^M return x + 1;^M}
^Mint subtract1(int x) {^M return x - 1;^M}
^Mint double_it(int x) {^M return x * 2;^M}
^Mint halve_it(int x) {^Mreturn x / 2;^M}
^Mint main() {^M int myint;^M int result;^M ... (2 Replies)
i'm grepping for words in the /var/adm/messages (sun solaris).
but it looks like while my grepping finds the strings, when it outputs them out, the beginning of some lines are chopped off.
Jun 13 14:06:02 sky.net ufs: NOTICE: alloc: /prod: file system full
3 14:39:19 sky.net ufs: NOTICE:... (1 Reply)
so i have strings such as this:
'postfix/local#2,5#|CRON.*12062.*root.*CMD#2,5#|roice.*NQN1#1,2#|toysprc#1,4#'
i need to get rid of the "#" and the numbers between them for each of the strings above. so the desired output should be:
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
paste
PASTE(1) BSD General Commands Manual PASTE(1)NAME
paste -- merge corresponding or subsequent lines of files
SYNOPSIS
paste [-s] [-d list] file ...
DESCRIPTION
The paste utility concatenates the corresponding lines of the given input files, replacing all but the last file's newline characters with a
single tab character, and writes the resulting lines to standard output. If end-of-file is reached on an input file while other input files
still contain data, the file is treated as if it were an endless source of empty lines.
The options are as follows:
-d list Use one or more of the provided characters to replace the newline characters instead of the default tab. The characters in list
are used circularly, i.e., when list is exhausted the first character from list is reused. This continues until a line from the
last input file (in default operation) or the last line in each file (using the -s option) is displayed, at which time paste
begins selecting characters from the beginning of list again.
The following special characters can also be used in list:
newline character
tab character
\ backslash character
Empty string (not a null character).
Any other character preceded by a backslash is equivalent to the character itself.
-s Concatenate all of the lines of each separate input file in command line order. The newline character of every line except the
last line in each input file is replaced with the tab character, unless otherwise specified by the -d option.
If '-' is specified for one or more of the input files, the standard input is used; standard input is read one line at a time, circularly,
for each instance of '-'.
The paste utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO cut(1)STANDARDS
The paste utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
BSD June 6, 1993 BSD