Hi,
I need some advise on treating non printable chars over ascii value 126
Case 1 :
On some fields in the text , I need to retiain then 'as-is' and load to a database.I understand it also depends on database codepage.
but i just wanna know how do i ensure it do not change while loading... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I'm looking for a script that receives the traps from a windows machine and treate them. For exemple just write a line in a file on UNIX server. Can you help me ?
Thank you. (2 Replies)
I have a file list.txt which has a list of file names with spaces between the file names like
/emptydir/file 1
how do i browse through the list.txt displaying the filenames. Almost all the file names in list.txt have space between them.This file list.txt is formed by using the find statement to... (5 Replies)
Is there a way to treat a string as date and compare it to the current date?
lets assum inpu lik
$ cat myfile
Name Last login
**************************
Sara 2/13/2012
kalpeer 2/15/2012
ygemici 2/14/2012
we want to display the name who logged in during the last #... (4 Replies)
Hi, I need to display the last column value in the below o/p.
sam2 PS 03/10/11 0 441
Unable to get o/p with this awk code
awk -F"+" '{ print $4 }' pwdchk.txt
I need to display 441(in this eg.) and also accept it as a variable to treat it with if condition and take a decision.... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to write a bash script to perform basic arithmetic operations but I want to run a comparison on the arguments first to check that they're a number greater than zero.
I want an error to pop up if the arguments args aren't >= 0 so I have:
if ! ]; then
echo "bad number: $1"
fi
... (14 Replies)
Hi, awk seem to be acting differently in Unix and Linux when it comes to formatting. This is making it difficult to migrate scripts.
for example:
UNIX:
echo "123" |awk '{printf ("%05s\n" ,$1)}'
00123
echo "123" |awk '{printf ("%05d\n" ,$1)}'
00123
echo "S12" |awk '{printf ("%05s\n"... (9 Replies)
Greetings Experts,
We are migrating from AIX to RHEL Linux. I have created a script to verify and report the NULLs and SPACEs in the key columns and duplicates on key combination of "|" delimited set of big files. Following is the code that was successfully running in AIX.
awk -F "|" 'BEGIN {... (5 Replies)
Hello there
I'd like to make a copy of 2nd column and have it printed in place of column 1. Remaining columns are needed as it.
test data:
ProbeSet GeneSymbol X22565285 X22566285
ILMN_1050008 MYOCD 6.577 7.395
ILMN_1050014 GPRC6A 6.595 6.668
ILMN_1050017 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: genome
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
pamdeinterlace
pamdeinterlace(1) General Commands Manual pamdeinterlace(1)NAME
pamdeinterlace - remove ever other row from a PAM/PNM image
SYNOPSIS
pamdeinterlace [-takeodd] [-takeeven] N [infile]
You can use the minimum unique abbreviation of the options. You can use two hyphens instead of one. You can separate an option name from
its value with white space instead of an equals sign.
DESCRIPTION
pamdeinterlace Removes all the even-numbered or odd-numbered rows from the input PNM or PAM image. Specify which with the -takeeven and
-takeodd options.
This can be useful if the image is a video capture from an interlaced video source. In that case, each row shows the subject 1/60 second
before or after the two rows that surround it. If the subject is moving, this can detract from the quality of the image.
Because the resulting image is half the height of the input image, you will then want to use pamstretch or pnmscale to restore it to its
normal height:
pamdeinterlace myimage.ppm | pamstretch -yscale=2 >newimage.ppm
OPTIONS -takeodd
Take the odd-numbered rows from the input and put them in the output. The rows are numbered starting at zero, so the first row in
the output is the second row from the input. You cannot specify both -takeeven and -takeodd.
-takeeven
Take the even-numbered rows from the input and put them in the output. The rows are numbered starting at zero, so the first row in
the output is the first row from the input. This is the default. You cannot specify both -takeeven and -takeodd.
SEE ALSO pamstretch(1), pnmscale(1)
11 November 2001 pamdeinterlace(1)