i have an awk statement which i am using to count the number of occurences of the number ,5, in the file:
awk '/,5,/ {count++}' TRY.txt | awk 'END { printf(" Total parts: %d",count)}'
i know there is a total of 10 matches..what is wrong here?
thanks (16 Replies)
I’m trying to modify someone perl script to fix a bug. The piece of code checks that the zone name you want to add is unique. However, when the code runs, it finds a partial match using grep, and decides it already exists, so the “create” command exits.
$cstatus = `${ZADM} list -vic | grep... (3 Replies)
QUESTION1:
How do you grep only an exact string. I am using Solaris10 and do not have any GNU products installed.
Contents of car.txt
CAR1_KEY0
CAR1_KEY1
CAR2_KEY0
CAR2_KEY1
CAR1_KEY10
CURRENT COMMAND LINE: WHERE VARIABLE CAR_NUMBER=1 AND KEY_NUMBER=1
grep... (1 Reply)
Hello, my apologizes if the title is a bit confusing. I am currently working with a series of files that have the form:
2
3
7
17
21
However, I need to insert records such that I have:
0 0
1 0
2 1
3 1
4 0
5 0
6 0
7 1
.... And so on.
Currently I have the... (2 Replies)
I've seen dozens of similar threads but none seem to match what I'm looking for and I can't seem to make sense of how to do this so any help would be immensely appreciated.
I am running a command that generates this output:
Mike Smith
Mike Smith Alaska
Mike Smith Washington
Mike Smith Alaska... (6 Replies)
To match range, the command is:
awk '/BEGIN/,/END/'
but what I want is the range is printed only if there is additional pattern that matches in the range itself? maybe like this:
awk '/BEGIN/,/END/ if only in that range there is /pattern/'
Thanks (8 Replies)
hello masters,
I am working with csv files that open just fine in excel, but have sub-fields which are comma separated as well.
a 3 column csv looks like
a,b,"c,d,e"
f,g,h
How do I make join or sort believe that "c,d,e" is just 1 field? (8 Replies)
Hello masters,
Please help on the following.
I have a tab delimited file with subfields space delimited.
1 a b x y hhghd ghgf
2 v t f g gdgdgdg hghg
I have 3 lookup table files tab delimited, for fields 2,3 and 4 respectively
Lookup2
a 10
b 20
v 30
t 40
Lookup3 (12 Replies)
Dear All,
Here is my input
TAACGCACTTGCGGCCCCGGGATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATGGATT
NAGAGGGACGGCCGGGGGCATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGATTTC
NGGGTTTTAAGCAGGAGGTGTCAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGATTT
NTGGAACCTGGCGCTAGACCAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATGGATTTTTG
ATACTTACCTGGCAGGGGAGATACCATGATCAATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
bindtags
bindtags(n) Tk Built-In Commands bindtags(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
bindtags - Determine which bindings apply to a window, and order of evaluation
SYNOPSIS
bindtags window ?tagList?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
When a binding is created with the bind command, it is associated either with a particular window such as .a.b.c, a class name such as But-
ton, the keyword all, or any other string. All of these forms are called binding tags. Each window contains a list of binding tags that
determine how events are processed for the window. When an event occurs in a window, it is applied to each of the window's tags in order:
for each tag, the most specific binding that matches the given tag and event is executed. See the bind command for more information on the
matching process.
By default, each window has four binding tags consisting of the name of the window, the window's class name, the name of the window's near-
est toplevel ancestor, and all, in that order. Toplevel windows have only three tags by default, since the toplevel name is the same as
that of the window. The bindtags command allows the binding tags for a window to be read and modified.
If bindtags is invoked with only one argument, then the current set of binding tags for window is returned as a list. If the tagList argu-
ment is specified to bindtags, then it must be a proper list; the tags for window are changed to the elements of the list. The elements of
tagList may be arbitrary strings; however, any tag starting with a dot is treated as the name of a window; if no window by that name
exists at the time an event is processed, then the tag is ignored for that event. The order of the elements in tagList determines the
order in which binding scripts are executed in response to events. For example, the command
bindtags .b {all . Button .b}
reverses the order in which binding scripts will be evaluated for a button named .b so that all bindings are invoked first, following by
bindings for .b's toplevel ("."), followed by class bindings, followed by bindings for .b. If tagList is an empty list then the binding
tags for window are returned to the default state described above.
The bindtags command may be used to introduce arbitrary additional binding tags for a window, or to remove standard tags. For example, the
command
bindtags .b {.b TrickyButton . all}
replaces the Button tag for .b with TrickyButton. This means that the default widget bindings for buttons, which are associated with the
Button tag, will no longer apply to .b, but any bindings associated with TrickyButton (perhaps some new button behavior) will apply.
EXAMPLE
If you have a set of nested frame widgets and you want events sent to a button widget to also be delivered to all the widgets up to the
current toplevel (in contrast to Tk's default behavior, where events are not delivered to those intermediate windows) to make it easier to
have accelerators that are only active for part of a window, you could use a helper procedure like this to help set things up:
proc setupBindtagsForTreeDelivery {widget} {
set tags [list $widget [winfo class $widget]]
set w $widget
set t [winfo toplevel $w]
while {$w ne $t} {
set w [winfo parent $w]
lappend tags $w
}
lappend tags all
bindtags $widget $tags
}
SEE ALSO
bind(n)
KEYWORDS
binding, event, tag
Tk 4.0 bindtags(n)