Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting SELECT and wrapping to next column Post 302700587 by DGPickett on Thursday 13th of September 2012 05:12:22 PM
Old 09-13-2012
Let your lists be vertical and limitless using '\'
Code:
$ echo 1\
>  2
1 2
$

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

select a column

I've a file like this: andrea andre@lol.com october antonio@lol.com marco 45247@pop.com kk@pop.com may pollo@lol.com mary mary@lol.com can I select only the column with email adress? can I utilise a filter with @ ? I want obtain this: ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: alfreale
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

select first column of file

Hi, Following is my file output 247 Sleep 25439 NULL 259 Sleep 25460 NULL 277 Sleep 15274 NULL 361 Sleep 2 NULL 362 Sleep 202 NULL I want to select only first column to other file How can... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaushik02018
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to select and edit on a particular column?

How can I use awk to pick a particular column and work on it? For example, I want to count the number of characters in column10 that are separated by |? Thank you. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ivpz
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

SQL select all but not if it is already in an other column

I know I know.. for sure one of the easier mysql statements. But somehow I can not figure out this. I expect to see all distinct items of 'data_12' where 'kwroot' has 'straxx' in, and in the same row 'data_12' ist (not = 'kwsearched' in any existing row) data_12 ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: lowmaster
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

to select according to the second column..!!

the input is : 6298 | anna | chennai | 7/4/08 3981 | dastan | bagh | 8/2/07 6187 | galma | london | 9/5/01 3728 | gonna | kol | 8/2/10 3987 | hogja | mumbai | 8/5/09 2898 | homy | pune | 7/4/09 9167 | tamina | ny | 8/3/10 4617 | vazir | ny now how to get the following output : 3987 |... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: adityamitra
4 Replies

6. Programming

select value from 'value' column if the Value2 is having a particular value.

Two columns are there in a table Value and Value2.I need to select a desired value from 'value' column if the Value2 is having a particular value. Ex. Table has values ---------------------------- Value Value2 ---------------------------- 1 GOD ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: gameboy87
6 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Select rows where the 3rd column value is over xx

Hi All, I've got a text file which is Postcode,Postcode, Travel_time and I want to select all of the rows where the 3rd column value is over 255. Can someone show me the magic on how to do this? Originally it did contain 4 columns but i've managed to strip out the first 3 using: cat textfile |... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gman
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

select last column

Hi! From a file the format of whichis as in the sample here below, I need to get two files having just 2 columns, being - for the first file - the 2nd than the 1st from the original file; and - for the second file - the LAST then the 1st column of the original file. Moreover, I would sort the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mjomba
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

To select only column starting with a particular value

Hi all, Am using awk to reformat an existing file cat $INP_FILE1 | while read line do echo "$line" | nawk ' BEGIN {FS=","} {print("5",$1,$28,"$27",$26)}' >> $OUT_FILE1 done my question is, i would like to read lines that are starting with particular value only example ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: selvankj
9 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Select record having different value in second column

I want records which have more than one and different value in the second column on the below sample file. Ex, I have the samle file below :- XYZ 1 XYZ 3 abc 1 abc 1 qwe 2 qwe 1 qwe 3 I want to select XYZ and QWE line only. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sanjeev Yadav
6 Replies
DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects(3) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects(3)

NAME
DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects - SQL::Abstract::Limit-like functionality for DBIx::Class::SQLMaker DESCRIPTION
This module replicates a lot of the functionality originally found in SQL::Abstract::Limit. While simple limits would work as-is, the more complex dialects that require e.g. subqueries could not be reliably implemented without taking full advantage of the metadata locked within DBIx::Class::ResultSource classes. After reimplementation of close to 80% of the SQL::Abstract::Limit functionality it was deemed more practical to simply make an independent DBIx::Class-specific limit-dialect provider. SQL LIMIT DIALECTS
Note that the actual implementations listed below never use "*" literally. Instead proper re-aliasing of selectors and order criteria is done, so that the limit dialect are safe to use on joined resultsets with clashing column names. Currently the provided dialects are: LimitOffset SELECT ... LIMIT $limit OFFSET $offset Supported by PostgreSQL and SQLite LimitXY SELECT ... LIMIT $offset $limit Supported by MySQL and any SQL::Statement based DBD RowNumberOver SELECT * FROM ( SELECT *, ROW_NUMBER() OVER( ORDER BY ... ) AS RNO__ROW__INDEX FROM ( SELECT ... ) ) WHERE RNO__ROW__INDEX BETWEEN ($offset+1) AND ($limit+$offset) ANSI standard Limit/Offset implementation. Supported by DB2 and MSSQL >= 2005. SkipFirst SELECT SKIP $offset FIRST $limit * FROM ... Suported by Informix, almost like LimitOffset. According to SQL::Abstract::Limit "... SKIP $offset LIMIT $limit ..." is also supported. FirstSkip SELECT FIRST $limit SKIP $offset * FROM ... Supported by Firebird/Interbase, reverse of SkipFirst. According to SQL::Abstract::Limit "... ROWS $limit TO $offset ..." is also supported. RowNum Depending on the resultset attributes one of: SELECT * FROM ( SELECT *, ROWNUM rownum__index FROM ( SELECT ... ) WHERE ROWNUM <= ($limit+$offset) ) WHERE rownum__index >= ($offset+1) or SELECT * FROM ( SELECT *, ROWNUM rownum__index FROM ( SELECT ... ) ) WHERE rownum__index BETWEEN ($offset+1) AND ($limit+$offset) or SELECT * FROM ( SELECT ... ) WHERE ROWNUM <= ($limit+1) Supported by Oracle. Top SELECT * FROM SELECT TOP $limit FROM ( SELECT TOP $limit FROM ( SELECT TOP ($limit+$offset) ... ) ORDER BY $reversed_original_order ) ORDER BY $original_order Unreliable Top-based implementation, supported by MSSQL < 2005. CAVEAT Due to its implementation, this limit dialect returns incorrect results when $limit+$offset > total amount of rows in the resultset. FetchFirst SELECT * FROM ( SELECT * FROM ( SELECT * FROM ( SELECT * FROM ... ) ORDER BY $reversed_original_order FETCH FIRST $limit ROWS ONLY ) ORDER BY $original_order FETCH FIRST $limit ROWS ONLY ) Unreliable FetchFirst-based implementation, supported by IBM DB2 <= V5R3. CAVEAT Due to its implementation, this limit dialect returns incorrect results when $limit+$offset > total amount of rows in the resultset. GenericSubQ SELECT * FROM ( SELECT ... ) WHERE ( SELECT COUNT(*) FROM $original_table cnt WHERE cnt.id < $original_table.id ) BETWEEN $offset AND ($offset+$rows-1) This is the most evil limit "dialect" (more of a hack) for really stupid databases. It works by ordering the set by some unique column, and calculating the amount of rows that have a less-er value (thus emulating a "RowNum"-like index). Of course this implies the set can only be ordered by a single unique column. Also note that this technique can be and often is excruciatingly slow. You may have much better luck using "software_limit" in DBIx::Class::ResultSet instead. Currently used by Sybase ASE, due to lack of any other option. AUTHORS
See "CONTRIBUTORS" in DBIx::Class. LICENSE
You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.18.2 2014-01-22 DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:51 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy