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Full Discussion: Help in awk/bash
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Help in awk/bash Post 302752021 by RudiC on Saturday 5th of January 2013 09:15:36 AM
Old 01-05-2013
As much as I want to help, I am sorry I have to say I can't. Thank you for the effort explaining your input in detail, but post #4 does not relate to post #1 by no means. E.g. group No. 10 being centered at 052 here and 051 there, having 31 branches here and 30 there, groups showing up here not showing up there and vice versa, and, groups in file2 not being represented in file 1.
On top, I still can't see what pattern to fill in (see my post #2), where to get it, based on what rule, even if I take file g.txt to be a distilled version of file1 and file2.
It would be helpful if you post a minimum number of input files (e.g. atoms.txt and g.txt) with interrelating data, an output file and a set of understandable rules on how to get one into the other.

Last edited by RudiC; 01-05-2013 at 10:21 AM..
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h5diff(1)						      General Commands Manual							 h5diff(1)

NAME
h5diff - Compares two HDF5 files and reports the differences. SYNOPSIS
h5diff file1 file2 [OPTIONS] [object1 [object2 ] ] DESCRIPTION
h5diff is a command line tool that compares two HDF5 files, file1 and file2, and reports the differences between them. Optionally, h5diff will compare two objects within these files. If only one object, object1, is specified, h5diff will compare object1 in file1 with object1 in file2. In two objects, object1 and object2, are specified, h5diff will compare object1 in file1 with object2 in file2. These objects must be HDF5 datasets. object1 and object2 must be expressed as absolute paths from the respective file's root group. Additional information, with several sample cases, can be found in the document H5diff Examples. OPTIONS
file1 file2 The HDF5 files to be compared. -h Print all differences. -r Print only the names of objects that differ; do not print the differences. These objects may be HDF5 datasets, groups, or named datatypes. -n count Print difference up to count differences, then stop. count must be a positive integer. -d delta Print only differences that are greater than the limit delta. delta must be a positive number. The comparison criterion is whether the absolute value of the difference of two corresponding values is greater than delta (e.g., |a-b| > delta, where a is a value in file1 and b is a value in file2). -p relative Print only differences that are greater than a relative error. relative must be a positive number. The comparison criterion is whether the absolute value of the difference 1 and the ratio of two corresponding values is greater than relative (e.g., |1-(b/a)| > relative where a is a value in file1 and b is a value in file2). object1 object2 Specific object(s) within the files to be compared. EXAMPLES
The following h5diff call compares the object /a/b in file1 with the object /a/c in file2: h5diff file1 file2 /a/b /a/c This h5diff call compares the object /a/b in file1 with the same object in file2: h5diff file1 file2 /a/b And this h5diff call compares all objects in both files: h5diff file1 file2 SEE ALSO
h5dump(1), h5ls(1), h5repart(1), h5import(1), gif2h5(1), h52gif(1), h5perf(1) h5diff(1)
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