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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Using sed '${linenum}d' $filename in shell Post 302597698 by rajubollas on Saturday 11th of February 2012 01:33:27 PM
Old 02-11-2012
Sample Data

Code:
SMaple data

Cat smaplet.txt

LSGWT52X7CS140735|12A_AB17ab1_ac
LSGWT52X7CS140736|22A_AB27ab2_ac
LSGWT52X7CS140737|12A_AB17Cab1_ac
LSGWT52X7CS140738|22A_AB27Cab2_ac
LSGWT52X7CS140739|12A_AB17Cab1_ac
LSGPC54U39F003800|22A_AB27Cab2_ac
LSGPC54U39F003801|12AAB17Cab1ac
LSGPC54U39F003802|22A_AB27Cab2ac
LSGPC54U39F003803|12AAB17Cab1ac
LSGPC54U39F003804|22AAB27Cab2_ac

Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment Please use code tags!
for your code and data - No colors or fancy fonts!

Last edited by methyl; 02-12-2012 at 08:04 PM.. Reason: removed unusual font
 

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ERROR(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							  ERROR(3)

NAME
error, error_at_line, error_message_count, error_on_per_line, error_print_progname - glibc error reporting functions SYNOPSIS
#include <error.h> void error(int status, int errnum, const char *format, ...); void error_at_line(int status, int errnum, const char *filename, unsigned int linenum, const char *format, ...); extern unsigned int error_message_count; extern int error_one_per_line; extern void (* error_print_progname) (void); DESCRIPTION
error() is a general error-reporting function. It flushes stdout, and then outputs to stderr the program name, a colon and a space, the message specified by the printf(3)-style format string format, and, if errnum is nonzero, a second colon and a space followed by the string given by strerror(errnum). Any arguments required for format should follow format in the argument list. The output is terminated by a newline character. The program name printed by error() is the value of the global variable program_invocation_name(3). program_invocation_name initially has the same value as main()'s argv[0]. The value of this variable can be modified to change the output of error(). If status has a nonzero value, then error() calls exit(3) to terminate the program using the given value as the exit status. The error_at_line() function is exactly the same as error(), except for the addition of the arguments filename and linenum. The output produced is as for error(), except that after the program name are written: a colon, the value of filename, a colon, and the value of linenum. The preprocessor values __LINE__ and __FILE__ may be useful when calling error_at_line(), but other values can also be used. For example, these arguments could refer to a location in an input file. If the global variable error_one_per_line is set nonzero, a sequence of error_at_line() calls with the same value of filename and linenum will result in only one message (the first) being output. The global variable error_message_count counts the number of messages that have been output by error() and error_at_line(). If the global variable error_print_progname is assigned the address of a function (i.e., is not NULL), then that function is called instead of prefixing the message with the program name and colon. The function should print a suitable string to stderr. CONFORMING TO
These functions and variables are GNU extensions, and should not be used in programs intended to be portable. SEE ALSO
err(3), errno(3), exit(3), perror(3), program_invocation_name(3), strerror(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2010-08-29 ERROR(3)
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