Hi,
How to strip a portion of a file name from behind...Say for Eg..i have a file name like aaaaa.bbbbb.Mar-17-2007
i want to remove .Mar-17-2007...is there a one line command which can give this output...
Thanks
Kumar (5 Replies)
Hi there, if i have some strings ie
test_324423
test_242332
test_767667
but I only want the number part (the bolded bit) how do I strip the leftmost 5 characters from the output so that i will have just
324423
242332
767667
any help would be greatly appreciated
Gary (5 Replies)
Hi ,
i have to strip the spaces in the string which has the following value
ABC DEF
i want this to appear like this
ABC DEF
is there any spilt method?
please help....
Thanks (3 Replies)
I am trying to strip out certain characters from a string on both (left & right) sides. For example, line=see@hear|touch, i only want to echo the "hear" part. Well i have tried this approach:
line=see@hear|touch
templine=${line#*@} #removed "see@"
echo ${templine%%\|*} #removed... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm trying to generate a series of txt files starting from a plain csv file
part of my code:
#!/bin/ksh
INSTALLDIR=/Users/ME/Installdir
CSV=CSV.csv
TMP=/tmp/$(basename $0).txt
tr -s "\r" "\n" < /$INSTALLDIR/$CSV > $TMP
function Makefiles
{
printf '%24s:%30s\n' "sometext"... (1 Reply)
i want to parse a string and only display the digits in that string... How would i accomplish this with sed command.
For example.
input string: " 033434343 dafasdf"
output string: 03343434
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to enable rexec to automate certain tasks(it has to be rexec, not ssh or any other due to the system environment), so after switching to linux, I followed the certain instructions that were laid out in the web.
My operating system is fedora 17, so I first installed the... (1 Reply)
Hi There,
---------
file1
-------
~c asd@ac.com
--------------
Now i am using below command
cat file1|mailx -s " testing" -r " My Name" abc@tech.com (3 Replies)
I'm using an Ubuntu machine and expansion is not working properly. What would cause this? Do I need to check for any particular bash packages?
$ ipcs -m | grep $USER | awk '{printf "%s ",$2}'
$ ipcs -m | grep UNF | awk '{printf "%s ",$2}'
294912 1048577 425986 688131 786436 1245189... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cut-diff
CUT-DIFF(1) Cutter's manual CUT-DIFF(1)NAME
cut-diff - show difference between 2 files with color
SYNOPSIS
cut-diff [option ...] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
cut-diff is a diff command that uses diff feature in Cutter. It shows difference with color.
It's recommended that you use a normal diff(1) when you want to use with patch(1) or you don't need color.
OPTIONS --version
cut-diff shows its own version and exits.
-c [yes|true|no|false|auto], --color=[yes|true|no|false|auto]
If 'yes' or 'true' is specified, cut-diff uses colorized output by escape sequence. If 'no' or 'false' is specified, cut-diff never
use colorized output. If 'auto' or the option is omitted, cut-diff uses colorized output if available.
The default is auto.
-u, --unified
cut-diff uses unified diff format.
--context-lines=LINES
Shows diff context around LINES.
All lines are shown by default. When unified diff format is used, 3 lines are shown by default.
--label=LABEL, -L=LABEL
Uses LABEL as a header label. The first--label option value is used as file1's label and the second --label option value is used
asfile2's label.
Labels are the same as file names by default.
EXIT STATUS
The exit status is 0 for success, non-0 otherwise.
TODO: 0 for non-difference, 1 for difference and non-0 for errors.
EXAMPLE
In the following example, cut-diff shows difference between file1 and file2:
% cut-diff file1 file2
In the following example, cut-diff shows difference between file1 and file2 with unified diff format:
% cut-diff -u file1 file2
SEE ALSO diff(1)Cutter February 2011 CUT-DIFF(1)