File A
aa <space> --D--A--D---DDY---M--UM-M--MY
Another file
D3
M9
So output shud be
Here in FileA D which is 3 after removing dash
after we have counted dash D is position at 9
and for M is 23
final output will be
D9
M23 (2 Replies)
is there another way of doing the below:
echo "7 3 8 2 2 1 3 83.4 8.2 4 8 73 90.5" | bc
shell is bash. os is linux and sunos.
bc seems to have an issue with long range of numbers (12 Replies)
I have a spreadsheet of extremely long rows of numbers. I want to print only the last column. Tried using printf but there seems to be too many rows.
example:
3 100 34 7 23 0 8 ..... X
400 203 778 1 ..........Y
58 3 9 0 100 ..........Z
I only want to print X, Y and... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a file which has hundred of records with fixed number of fields. In each record there is set of 8 characters which represent the duration of that activity. I want to sum up the duration present in all the records for a report. The problem is the duration changes per record so I... (5 Replies)
Hi experts, I've been struggling to format a large genetic dataset. It's complicated to explain so I'll simply post example input/output
$cat input.txt
ID GENE pos start end
blah1 coolgene 1 3 5
blah2 coolgene 1 4 6
blah3 coolgene 1 4 ... (4 Replies)
Sorry if I repost my question in this section, but I'm really in a hurry since I have to finish my work... :(
Dear community,
I have a table with two rows like:
Row1 Row2
======= =======
7,3 text 1
1,3 text 2
1,2,3 blabla
What i need to do is add/copy... (2 Replies)
the following is used to add numbers:
echo 7 47 47 44 4 3 3 3 3 3 | awk '{ for(i=1; i<=NF;i++) j+=$i; print j; j=0 }'
how do i multiply OR subtract a row of numbers using the above tactic? (8 Replies)
Need help in coding:
File with several rows incl. numbers like
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
...
How can i build the sum of each row seperately?
10
26
...
Thx for help.
Please use CODE tags as required by forum rules! (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: smitty11
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
dblink_build_sql_update
DBLINK_BUILD_SQL_UPDATE(3) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation DBLINK_BUILD_SQL_UPDATE(3)NAME
dblink_build_sql_update - builds an UPDATE statement using a local tuple, replacing the primary key field values with alternative supplied
values
SYNOPSIS
dblink_build_sql_update(text relname,
int2vector primary_key_attnums,
integer num_primary_key_atts,
text[] src_pk_att_vals_array,
text[] tgt_pk_att_vals_array) returns text
DESCRIPTION
dblink_build_sql_update can be useful in doing selective replication of a local table to a remote database. It selects a row from the local
table based on primary key, and then builds a SQL UPDATE command that will duplicate that row, but with the primary key values replaced by
the values in the last argument. (To make an exact copy of the row, just specify the same values for the last two arguments.) The UPDATE
command always assigns all fields of the row -- the main difference between this and dblink_build_sql_insert is that it's assumed that the
target row already exists in the remote table.
ARGUMENTS
relname
Name of a local relation, for example foo or myschema.mytab. Include double quotes if the name is mixed-case or contains special
characters, for example "FooBar"; without quotes, the string will be folded to lower case.
primary_key_attnums
Attribute numbers (1-based) of the primary key fields, for example 1 2.
num_primary_key_atts
The number of primary key fields.
src_pk_att_vals_array
Values of the primary key fields to be used to look up the local tuple. Each field is represented in text form. An error is thrown if
there is no local row with these primary key values.
tgt_pk_att_vals_array
Values of the primary key fields to be placed in the resulting UPDATE command. Each field is represented in text form.
RETURN VALUE
Returns the requested SQL statement as text.
NOTES
As of PostgreSQL 9.0, the attribute numbers in primary_key_attnums are interpreted as logical column numbers, corresponding to the column's
position in SELECT * FROM relname. Previous versions interpreted the numbers as physical column positions. There is a difference if any
column(s) to the left of the indicated column have been dropped during the lifetime of the table.
EXAMPLES
SELECT dblink_build_sql_update('foo', '1 2', 2, '{"1", "a"}', '{"1", "b"}');
dblink_build_sql_update
-------------------------------------------------------------
UPDATE foo SET f1='1',f2='b',f3='1' WHERE f1='1' AND f2='b'
(1 row)
PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 DBLINK_BUILD_SQL_UPDATE(3)