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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Copying part of a data file into another Post 302830127 by gokcell on Monday 8th of July 2013 06:38:49 AM
Old 07-08-2013
awk '$1>=70'

Assume that your data1 is like that

45 Deney
78 Selam
101 Hi
25 Hello
1
2
3
4
5
67
8
9
125
122
20
30
40
50
60

Awk can solve your question easily,

cat data1 | awk '$1>=25'
45 Deney
78 Selam
101 Hi
25 Hello
67
125
122
30
40
50
60

Regards,
Goksel Yangin
Computer Engineer
This User Gave Thanks to gokcell For This Post:
 

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ISUPPER(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						ISUPPER(3)

NAME
isupper -- upper-case character test LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <ctype.h> int isupper(int c); DESCRIPTION
The isupper() function tests for any upper-case letter. The value of the argument must be representable as an unsigned char or the value of EOF. In the ASCII character set, this includes the following characters (preceded by their numeric values, in octal): 101 ``A'' 102 ``B'' 103 ``C'' 104 ``D'' 105 ``E'' 106 ``F'' 107 ``G'' 110 ``H'' 111 ``I'' 112 ``J'' 113 ``K'' 114 ``L'' 115 ``M'' 116 ``N'' 117 ``O'' 120 ``P'' 121 ``Q'' 122 ``R'' 123 ``S'' 124 ``T'' 125 ``U'' 126 ``V'' 127 ``W'' 130 ``X'' 131 ``Y'' 132 ``Z'' RETURN VALUES
The isupper() function returns zero if the character tests false and returns non-zero if the character tests true. COMPATIBILITY
The 4.4BSD extension of accepting arguments outside of the range of the unsigned char type in locales with large character sets is considered obsolete and may not be supported in future releases. The iswupper() function should be used instead. SEE ALSO
ctype(3), isalnum_l(3), iswupper(3), toupper(3), ascii(7) STANDARDS
The isupper() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90''). BSD
July 17, 2005 BSD
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