Hi,
I have below awk statement and I need to convert the second field ( substr($0,8,6))from minutes to hours with 2 decimail place. How can I achieve this?
/usr/bin/awk '{print substr($0,23,4),substr($0,8,6)}' /tmp/MANAGER_LIST.$$ >> /tmp/NEWMANAGER_LIST.$$
Thanks for any help! (4 Replies)
I was wondering can anyone give me a clue how to start script which would do the following:
I have 2 numbers as input for example: 100 and 1000 and I need to create file and in that file should be written
100 - 199
200 - 299
300 - 399
400 - 499
500 - 599
600 - 699
700 - 799... (3 Replies)
hi all
Am new to scripting...
So,i have a file named file1 its contents are as follows:
joy 55 66 77
ruby 77 88 99
saloni 88 44 33
I would require a script which will calculate its percentage,its total and the average with awk script
Many thanks in advance..
Please reply me at... (4 Replies)
Hi
First field is the Record Type. A Record Type 5 can have multiple Record Type 6's before another Record Type 5 appears.
I want to calculate the total of fields at position 8-11 on Record type 6 when Record Type 5 has a field at position 11-14 equals to '2222'. then it should delete the lines... (2 Replies)
root@erpdevserver $ vxassist -g devdg maxsize
Maximum volume size: 55207936 (26957Mb)
This is the output in vxvm(3.1).. my question is
how we can calculate this bytes(55207936) in to MB(output=26957) or in GB.plz tell how to calculate (2 Replies)
Is there any awk command to calculate P Value ?(Probability)
Is it possib;e to calculate P va;ue for this data for ex?
7.891284
8.148193
7.749575
7.958188
7.887702
7.714877
8.141548
7.51845
8.27736
7.929853
7.92456
8.249126
7.989113
8.012573
8.351206 (2 Replies)
I know there have been a million questions regarding calculating time stamps, and with enough googling, I think I'm almost there (I'm going to use the changing the times into seconds and subtracting solution). My problem is that I'm not sure how to format my log file to get the info I need. Below... (0 Replies)
OK, here is the output from a cron I have here:
FULL OUTPUT:
acoxxx Lastlogin= 2010/07/15 13:10
db2t Lastlogin= 2010/07/16 13:09
db2tadm Lastlogin= 2010/07/20 13:09
eisuser Lastlogin= 2010/07/20 11:53
israel Lastlogin= 2010/07/10 11:42
nmon Lastlogin= 2010/07/05 12:55
norbac Lastlogin=... (4 Replies)
I want to calculate the average line by line of some files with several lines on them, the files are identical, just want to average the 3rd columns of those files.:wall:
Example file:
File 1
001 0.046 0.667267
001 0.047 0.672028
001 0.048 0.656025
001 0.049 ... (2 Replies)
I am trying to use awk to calculate the average of all lines in $2 for every file in a directory. The below bash seems to do that, but I cannot figure out how to capture the string before the _ as the output file name and have it be tab-delimeted. Thank you :).
Filenames in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
scope
scope(n) [incr Tcl] scope(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
scope - capture the namespace context for a variable
SYNOPSIS
itcl::scope name
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Creates a scoped value for the specified name, which must be a variable name. If the name is an instance variable, then the scope command
returns a string of the following form:
@itcl object varName
This is recognized in any context as an instance variable belonging to object. So with itcl3.0 and beyond, it is possible to use instance
variables in conjunction with widgets. For example, if you have an object with a private variable x, and you can use x in conjunction with
the -textvariable option of an entry widget. Before itcl3.0, only common variables could be used in this manner.
If the name is not an instance variable, then it must be a common variable or a global variable. In that case, the scope command returns
the fully qualified name of the variable, e.g., ::foo::bar::x.
If the name is not recognized as a variable, the scope command returns an error.
Ordinary variable names refer to variables in the global namespace. A scoped value captures a variable name together with its namespace
context in a way that allows it to be referenced properly later. It is needed, for example, to wrap up variable names when a Tk widget is
used within a namespace:
namespace foo {
private variable mode 1
radiobutton .rb1 -text "Mode #1" -variable [scope mode] -value 1
pack .rb1
radiobutton .rb2 -text "Mode #2" -variable [scope mode] -value 2
pack .rb2
}
Radiobuttons .rb1 and .rb2 interact via the variable "mode" contained in the namespace "foo". The scope command guarantees this by return-
ing the fully qualified variable name ::foo::mode.
You should never use the @itcl syntax directly. For example, it is a bad idea to write code like this:
set {@itcl ::fred x} 3
puts "value = ${@itcl ::fred x}"
Instead, you should always use the scope command to generate the variable name dynamically. Then, you can pass that name to a widget or to
any other bit of code in your program.
KEYWORDS
code, namespace, variable
itcl scope(n)