Hi all,
I am trying to create a file which has one or more ranges based on a file containing a long list. The problem is that the file which has this list is not continuous and is broken in many places. I will try to illustrate by an example:
The List File:
1
2
3
4
5
6
9
10
11
12... (5 Replies)
I have 3 variables with different information.. they look like this (row-wise aswell):
Variable1 =
Roland
Kalle
Dalius
Variable2 =
ake123
ler321
kaf434
Variable3 =
Richardsen
Sworden
Lokthar
How can I sort them by variable3 alphabetical and add them into the same output so... (0 Replies)
Hi all
I'm having a few issues with sorting some data into easily-readable columns.
Original data in file:
Number of visits IP Address
8 244.44.145.122
8 234.45.165.125
6 225.107.26.10
I firstly tried the column -t command which results in this:
Number of ... (4 Replies)
I have a string containing fields separated by space
Example
set sr="Fred Ted Joe Peter Paul Jean Chris Tim Tex"
and want to display it in a column format, for example to a maximum
of a window of 100 characters
And hopefully display some thing like
Fred Ted Joe ... (3 Replies)
Hello Unix experts,
I need a help to create a subset file. I know with cut comand, its very easy to select many different columns, or threshold. But here I have a bit problem as in my data file is big. And I don't want to identify the column numbers or names manually. I am trying to find any... (7 Replies)
Hi all, looking for some help here. I'm what you'd call a dirty programmer. my shell scripts might be ugly, but they (usually) function...
Say I have a single column text file with a list of dates (yyyymmdd) that represent the elevation of a point on that date (I work with land subsidence, so... (2 Replies)
I have 2 files, that look like this:
ID SNP1 SNP2 SNP3 SNP4
A1 1 2 0 2
A2 2 0 1 1
A3 0 2 NA 1
A4 1 1 0 2
and this:
SNP score
SNP1 0.5
SNP2 0.7
SNP3 0.8
SNP4 0.2
Basically, all of the SNP-values are 0,1, 2 or NA, and they each have a score, listed in the second file. The total... (5 Replies)
how do i create a list of every process running on my system and place it into a file lets say p1.txt (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: richiestank
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
fspec
fspec(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual fspec(4)NAME
fspec - format specification in text files
DESCRIPTION
It is sometimes convenient to maintain text files on the HP-UX system with non-standard tabs, (meaning tabs that are not set at every
eighth column). Generally, such files must be converted to a standard format - frequently by replacing all tabs with the appropriate num-
ber of spaces - before they can be processed by HP-UX system commands. A format specification occurring in the first line of a text file
specifies how tabs are to be expanded in the remainder of the file.
A format specification consists of a sequence of parameters separated by blanks and surrounded by the brackets and Each parameter consists
of a keyletter, possibly followed immediately by a value. The following parameters are recognized:
The parameter specifies tab settings for the file. The value of tabs must be one of the following:
1. A list of column numbers separated by commas, indicating tabs set at the specified columns;
2. A followed immediately by an integer n, indicating tabs at intervals of n columns;
3. A followed by the name of a ``canned'' tab specification.
Standard tabs are specified by or equivalently, etc. Recognized canned tabs are defined by the command (see
tabs(1)).
The parameter specifies a maximum line size. The value of size must be an integer. Size checking is performed after
tabs have been expanded, but before the margin is inserted at the beginning of the line.
The parameter specifies a number of spaces to be inserted at the beginning of each line. The value of margin must be an
integer.
The parameter takes no value. Its presence indicates that the line containing the format specification is to be deleted
from the converted file.
The parameter takes no value. Its presence indicates that the current format is to prevail only until another format
specification is encountered in the file.
Default values (assumed for parameters not supplied) are and If the parameter is not specified, no size checking is performed. If the
first line of a file does not contain a format specification, the above defaults are assumed for the entire file. The following is an
example of a line containing a format specification:
If a format specification can be disguised as a comment, it is not necessary to code the parameter.
Several HP-UX system commands correctly interpret the format specification for a file. Among them is which can be used to convert files to
a standard format acceptable to other HP-UX system commands.
SEE ALSO ed(1), newform(1), tabs(1).
fspec(4)