Hi All.
I need help for the below logic.
I ve a file like following
input file:
NopTX(5) // should be remain same as input
----Nop(@100); //1
Nop(90); //2
--Nop(80); //3
@Nop(70); //4
--@Nop(60); //5
@Nop@(@50); //6
--Nop@( 40); ... (3 Replies)
Hello, Would someone guide me on how to write a shell script the would search for a phone no using at the end text file using sed or awk and store it in a varaible or print it.
The text file is in this form
text or numbers in first line
text or numbers in second line
.
.
.
Firsname... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file with little blocks beginning with a number 761XXXXXX, and 0, 1, 2 or 3 lines below of it beginning with STUS as follow:
761625820
STUS ACTIVE 16778294
STUS NOT ACTIVE
761157389
STUS ACTIVE 16778294
761554921
STUS ACTIVE 16778294
STUS NOT ACTIVE
STUS ACTIVE OP... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have created one shell script in which it will count number of "~" tilda charactors from each line of the file.But the problem is that i need to count each line count individually, that means. if line one contains 14 "~"s and line two contains 15 "~"s then it should give an error msg.each... (3 Replies)
I have the below script running for generating file from PL/SQL stored procedure. I need to declare a shell variable and then pass this to sqlplus command to pass the same as a INPUT parameter for the stored procedure. Please help to do this.
#!/bin/sh
minlimit=0
maxlimit=10
size=100
while... (0 Replies)
num=10
sed -n '$num p' test.txt
sed -n '10 p' test.txt works
however i am putting the sed command in a loop and the line number is not static
Can someone please help me how to achive this. (1 Reply)
I need to remove double quoted strings from specific lines in a file. The specific line numbers are a variable. For example, line 5 of the file contains
A B C "string"
I want to remove "string". The following sed command works:
sed '5 s/\"*\"//' $file
If there are multiple... (2 Replies)
hi,
Is it possible to print a particular character n number of times in a line?
for example.
i am print the following line using echo command..
echo "files successfully moved"
i want to count the number of characters that are been displayed. i am doin it using
echo "files... (8 Replies)
I have one text file
1 2 3
a 5
4 4 3
where i want to print the line number
while read line
do
line_no=`awk '{print NR, $0}'`
echo 'In line no $line_no'
done <$txt_file
If i run the above code, it will print
'In line no 1 1 2 3'
It prints the line number with the whole... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RJG
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
paste
paste(1) General Commands Manual paste(1)Name
paste - merge file data
Syntax
paste file1 file2...
paste -dlist file1 file2...
paste -s [-dlist] file1 file2...
Description
In the first two forms, concatenates corresponding lines of the given input files file1, file2, etc. It treats each file as a column or
columns of a table and pastes them together horizontally (parallel merging).
In the last form, the command combines subsequent lines of the input file (serial merging).
In all cases, lines are glued together with the tab character, or with characters from an optionally specified list. Output is to the
standard output, so it can be used as the start of a pipe, or as a filter, if - is used in place of a file name.
Options
- Used in place of any file name, to read a line from the standard input. (There is no prompting).
-dlist Replaces characters of all but last file with nontabs characters (default tab). One or more characters immediately following -d
replace the default tab as the line concatenation character. The list is used circularly, i. e. when exhausted, it is reused. In
parallel merging (i. e. no -s option), the lines from the last file are always terminated with a new-line character, not from the
list. The list may contain the special escape sequences:
(new-line), (tab), \ (backslash), and (empty string, not a null
character). Quoting may be necessary, if characters have special meaning to the shell (for example, to get one backslash, use
-d"\\" ).
Without this option, the new-line characters of each but the last file (or last line in case of the -s option) are replaced by a
tab character. This option allows replacing the tab character by one or more alternate characters (see below).
-s Merges subsequent lines rather than one from each input file. Use tab for concatenation, unless a list is specified with -d
option. Regardless of the list, the very last character of the file is forced to be a new-line.
Examples
ls | paste -d" " -
list directory in one column
ls | paste - - - -
list directory in four columns
paste -s -d"
" file
combine pairs of lines into lines
Diagnostics
line too long
Output lines are restricted to 511 characters.
too many files
Except for -s option, no more than 12 input files may be specified.
See Alsocut(1), grep(1), pr(1)paste(1)