Hi
i need to print pathname in which the string present using 'find' command
sample output like this
Pathname String to be searched
---------- --------------------
/usr/test/myfile get
/opt/test/somefile get
Thanks in... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Could any one please let me know what is the option
available in UNIX to print by specifying the paper size?
We are using Unix11i. I could n't see any option specified in the 'lp' command to print the report by specifying the size of the paper. It would be of great help to me, if... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I need a bit of help with a perl script,
I have a file containing lines that look like:
M1 (Agnd Agnd ibias_gnP Agnd) nch l=250.0n w=10u m=1 ad=2.5e-12 \
as=2.5e-12 pd=20.5u ps=20.5u nrd=0.025 nrs=0.025 sa=2.5e-07 \
sb=2.5e-07
M21 (Agnd VSSabc Agnd Agnd) nch... (3 Replies)
I have a script where I need to use awk, go through some output, which is stored in a variable, and find a string Xms and Xmx and print the results, including the rest of that string.
Example of string:
... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have requirement to search string starting with specific characters and print whole matching word in that string.
example
mystr="ATTRIBUTE NAME="Event Name" VALUE="Execute""
I want to search by passing "NAME=" and result should be NAME="Event Name".
i am using below command but... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Have a file contains multiple line with the following
file.txt
insert: akdkas job:ksdjf
command: aldfasdf asdfsdfa asdfas.sh
machine: asdfa
need to grep for insert and machine and print only "akdkas,asdfa"
cat file.txt | egrep "insert|machine" | awk -F: '{print $2}'
output ... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file having data:
@HWUSI-EAS1727:19:6:1:3674:984:0:1#GTTAATA
NTTGGGTTTTCT
@HWUSI-EAS1727:19:6:1:3674:984:0:1#GTTA...
NTTGGGTTTTCT
@HWUSI-EAS1727:19:6:1:3674:984:0:1#.....CT
NTTGGGTTTTCT
I want to print everything starting from # till line ends.
can you please help me how... (5 Replies)
Hi ,
I have been trying to write a perl script to do this job. But i am not able to achieve the desired result. Below is my code.
my $current_value=12345;
my @users=("bob","ben","tom","harry");
open DBLIST,"<","/var/tmp/DBinfo";
my @input = <DBLIST>;
foreach (@users)
{
my... (11 Replies)
Based on the forums i have tried with grep command but i am unable to get the required output.
search this value /*------
If that is found then search for temp_vul and print
and also search until /*------- and print new_vul
Input file contains:
... (5 Replies)
I'm trying to find a way to search a range of similar words in a file. I tried using sed but can't get it right:sed 's/\(ca01\)*//'It only removes "ca01" but leaves the rest of the word. I still want the rest of the information on the lines just not these specific words listed below. Any... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: seekryts15
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
fmt
fmt(1) General Commands Manual fmt(1)NAME
fmt - Formats mail messages prior to sending
SYNOPSIS
fmt [-width] file...
DESCRIPTION
The fmt command reads the input file or files, or standard input if no files are specified, and writes to standard output a version of the
input with lines of a length as close as possible to width columns. (Because fmt is internationalized software, the number of display col-
umns is not necessarily equivalent to the number of bytes.)
The fmt command both joins and splits lines to achieve the desired width, but words are never joined or split; spaces are always preserved,
and lines are split at spaces only. In effect, fmt ignores newline characters in the input and wraps words to make lines a close as possi-
ble to width columns, resulting in individual lines of varying length but a consistent (new) text width overall. Because blank lines are
always preserved, fmt does not merge paragraphs separated by blank lines.
If you specify more than one file, the files are concatenated as input to fmt. If you do not specify -width, the default line length is 72
columns. Spacing at the beginning of input lines is always preserved in the output.
The fmt command is generally used to format mail messages to improve their appearance before they are sent. It may also be useful, how-
ever, for other simple formatting tasks. For example, when you are using vi, you can use the command :%!fmt -60 to reformat your text so
that all lines are approximately 60 columns long.
NOTES
The fmt command is a fast, simple formatting program. Standard text editing programs are more appropriate than fmt for complex formatting
operations. Do not use the fmt command if the message contains embedded messages or preformatted information from other files. This com-
mand formats the heading information in embedded messages and may change the format of preformatted information.
EXAMPLES
file1 contains these lines:
Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and animals.
To reformat this text to a narrower width, enter: fmt -30 file1
This results in the following, displayed on your screen: Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and
animals.
To make file1 wider, enter: fmt -60 file1
This results in: Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and animals. To format a message you have
created with the mailx editor, at the left margin enter: ~|fmt
After you enter the command, your message is formatted, in this case to the default line length of 72 columns, and the word continue
is displayed to indicate that you can enter more information or send your message.
SEE ALSO
Commands: mail(1), mailx(1), vi(1)fmt(1)