With the number of posts you have made, I would have expected that you would be able to handle something this easy by now. But, the following should do what you want:
Code:
awk 'FNR==NR{c[$1];next} {for(i=2;i<=NF;i+=2)if($i in c)$i=$i" (approved)";print}' f1 f2
Hi,
I have one situation. I have some 6-7 no. of files in one directory & I have to extract all the lines which exist in all these files. means I need to extract all common lines from all these files & put them in a separate file.
Please help. I know it could be done with the help of... (11 Replies)
Hey guys,
I have two files. file1 and file2.
file1:
a,1
b,2
c,343
d,343
e,4343
f,4544
file 2:
a,
d,
e,
Now i need to find the common data between these files from file1.
i.e
a,1 (8 Replies)
I have to compare 2 files which means 2 files with common entries in same column and separate those common entries in a diferent file as well right before those entries common so that I can separat common and Uncommon entries in rows in 2 different files. Is it possible
For eg.
one file
... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I have 2 files:
second file
I want if entries in one file will match in other file. It shuld wite approve before it
so output shuld be (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a file like this
ID 3BP5L_HUMAN Reviewed; 393 AA.
AC Q7L8J4; Q96FI5; Q9BQH8; Q9C0E3;
DT 05-FEB-2008, integrated into UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot.
DT 05-JUL-2004, sequence version 1.
DT 05-SEP-2012, entry version 71.
FT COILED 59 140 ... (1 Reply)
Hi
I have 2 files with following data
First file,
sp|Q676U5|A16L1_HUMAN,
Autophagy-related protein 16-1 OS=Homo sapiens GN=ATG16L1 PE=1 SV=2,
Maximum coiled-coil residue probability: 0.657 in position 163.
Maximum dimeric residue probability: 0.288 in position 163.
... (1 Reply)
I have two directories
Dir 1
/home/sid/release1
Dir 2
/home/sid/release2
I want to find the common files between the two directories
Dir 1 files
/home/sid/release1>ls -lrt
total 16
-rw-r--r-- 1 sid cool 0 Jun 19 12:53 File123
-rw-r--r-- 1 sid cool 0 Jun 19 12:53... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sidnow
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
libcurl-easy
libcurl(3) libcurl easy interface libcurl(3)NAME
libcurl-easy - easy interface overview
DESCRIPTION
When using libcurl's "easy" interface you init your session and get a handle (often referred to as an "easy handle"), which you use as
input to the easy interface functions you use. Use curl_easy_init(3) to get the handle.
You continue by setting all the options you want in the upcoming transfer, the most important among them is the URL itself (you can't
transfer anything without a specified URL as you may have figured out yourself). You might want to set some callbacks as well that will be
called from the library when data is available etc. curl_easy_setopt(3) is used for all this.
When all is setup, you tell libcurl to perform the transfer using curl_easy_perform(3). It will then do the entire operation and won't
return until it is done (successfully or not).
After the transfer has been made, you can set new options and make another transfer, or if you're done, cleanup the session by calling
curl_easy_cleanup(3). If you want persistent connections, you don't cleanup immediately, but instead run ahead and perform other transfers
using the same easy handle.
libcurl 7.10.7 12 Aug 2003 libcurl(3)