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Full Discussion: Replace 2nd column in file
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Replace 2nd column in file Post 302745163 by Don Cragun on Monday 17th of December 2012 12:26:35 AM
Old 12-17-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by sdosanjh
Tried the below nawk and it worked, but still i have one issue pending
if i use "for" loop to get "abcxx" then it displays multiple entries.

Code:
nawk -v col=2 -v val="TRUE" -v valN="\t\t\tFALSE\t\t\t" '$col == val {$col = valN}1' /tmp/test

I think we have a language barrier. Your specification of what you want done is not clear.

You say you want to match abcxx, but none of your input lines contains the string "abcxx".

You say that you want to change the second column, but you say that there are three tab spaces (whatever that means) and that the tab spaces have to be preserved. If you mean that there are three tab characters between the 1st field and the field that contains TRUE and that you want each tab character to be treated as a field separator, then say that the tab character is your field separator and you want the 4th field set to TRUE if abcxx appears in field 1 and you want the 4th field set to FALSE if abcxx does not appear in field 1.

If by abcxx you mean that you want to match the string "abc" immediately followed by two decimal digits, then you need to match against "abc[0-9][0-9]"
instead of matching against "abcxx".

And, awk (nawk on Solaris systems) matches extended regular expressions, not just fixed strings.
----------------
And, I forgot to ask why you need a for loop to get the constant "abcxx"???

Last edited by Don Cragun; 12-17-2012 at 01:30 AM.. Reason: Forgot about for loop question.
 

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COL(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						    COL(1)

NAME
col -- filter reverse line feeds from input SYNOPSIS
col [-bfhpx] [-l num] DESCRIPTION
The col utility filters out reverse (and half reverse) line feeds so that the output is in the correct order with only forward and half for- ward line feeds, and replaces white-space characters with tabs where possible. This can be useful in processing the output of nroff(1) and tbl(1). The col utility reads from the standard input and writes to the standard output. The options are as follows: -b Do not output any backspaces, printing only the last character written to each column position. -f Forward half line feeds are permitted (``fine'' mode). Normally characters printed on a half line boundary are printed on the fol- lowing line. -h Do not output multiple spaces instead of tabs (default). -l num Buffer at least num lines in memory. By default, 128 lines are buffered. -p Force unknown control sequences to be passed through unchanged. Normally, col will filter out any control sequences from the input other than those recognized and interpreted by itself, which are listed below. -x Output multiple spaces instead of tabs. The control sequences for carriage motion that col understands and their decimal values are listed in the following table: ESC-7 reverse line feed (escape then 7) ESC-8 half reverse line feed (escape then 8) ESC-9 half forward line feed (escape then 9) backspace moves back one column (8); ignored in the first column carriage return (13) newline forward line feed (10); also does carriage return shift in shift to normal character set (15) shift out shift to alternate character set (14) space moves forward one column (32) tab moves forward to next tab stop (9) vertical tab reverse line feed (11) All unrecognized control characters and escape sequences are discarded. The col utility keeps track of the character set as characters are read and makes sure the character set is correct when they are output. If the input attempts to back up to the last flushed line, col will display a warning message. ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of col as described in environ(7). EXIT STATUS
The col utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
colcrt(1), expand(1), nroff(1), tbl(1) STANDARDS
The col utility conforms to Version 2 of the Single UNIX Specification (``SUSv2''). HISTORY
A col command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BSD
August 4, 2004 BSD
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