@reveri
He does not say that he like to remove all other line, just remove -/+ of lines with F.
Also he does not specify what part of the line does contain the F, so it does not need to be at $3
If its at $3 and F may be in combination with other letters, use: awk '$3~"F"{NF-=1}1' file
Hi,
I am new to this forum and i would like to get help in this issue.
I have a file 1.txt as shown:
apple
banana
orange
apple
grapes
banana
orange
grapes
orange
....
Now i would like to search for pattern say apple or orange and then put a # at the beginning of the pattern... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I think you ppl did not get my question correctly, let me explain
I have 1.txt with following entries as shown:
0152364|134444|10.20.30.40|015236433
0233654|122555|10.20.30.50|023365433
**
**
**
In file 2.txt I have the following entries as shown:
... (1 Reply)
I am trying to do some thing like this ..
In a file , if pattern found insert new pattern at the begining of the line containing the pattern.
example:
in a file I have this.
gtrow0unit1/gctunit_crrownorth_stage5_outnet_feedthru_pin
if i find feedthru_pin want to insert !! at the... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I am trying to extract the values ( text between the xml tags) based on the Order Number.
here is the sample input
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<NJCustomer>
<Header>
<MessageIdentifier>Y504173382</MessageIdentifier>
... (13 Replies)
Need to remove rest of line after the equals sign on search pattern from the searchfile. Can anybody help. Couldn't find any similar example in the forum:
infile:
64_1535: Delm. = 86 var, aaga
64_1535: Fran. = 57 ex. ccc
64_1639: Feb. = 26 (link). def
64_1817: mar. = 3/4. drz ... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new to shell scripting and need help in scripting using CSH.
Here is what I am trying to so,
1. Search a specific string e.g. "task" from "task (input1, out1)".
2. Extract the arguements "input1" and "out1"
3. Add them in separate lines below. eg. "int input1" , " integer out1"
... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have got the below requirement. please suggest.
I have a file like,
Processing Item is:
/data/ing/cfg2/abc.txt
/data/ing/cfg3/bgc.txt
Processing Item is:
/data/cmd/for2/ght.txt
/data/kernal/config.klgt.txt
I want to process the above file to get the output file like,
... (5 Replies)
I am an awk beginner and need help figuring out how to search for a number in the first column and if it (or anything greater) exists, remove those lines.
AM11400012012 2.26 2.12 1.98 2.52 3.53 3.01 3.62 5.00 3.65 7.95 0.79 3.88 0.00
AM11400012013 3.39 2.29 ... (1 Reply)
I have this fileA
TEST FILE ABC
this file contains ABC;
TEST FILE DGHT this file contains DGHT;
TEST FILE 123
this file contains ABC,
this file contains DEF,
this file contains XYZ,
this file contains KLM
;
I want to have a fileZ that has only (begin search pattern for will be... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vbabz
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
glob_match
GLOB_MATCH(9) libata Core Internals GLOB_MATCH(9)NAME
glob_match - match a text string against a glob-style pattern
SYNOPSIS
int glob_match(const char * text, const char * pattern);
ARGUMENTS
text
the string to be examined
pattern
the glob-style pattern to be matched against
DESCRIPTION
Either/both of text and pattern can be empty strings.
Match text against a glob-style pattern, with wildcards and simple sets:
? matches any single character. * matches any run of characters. [xyz] matches a single character from the set: x, y, or z. [a-d] matches a
single character from the range: a, b, c, or d. [a-d0-9] matches a single character from either range.
The special characters ?, [, -, or *, can be matched using a set, eg. [*] Behaviour with malformed patterns is undefined, though generally
reasonable.
SAMPLE PATTERNS
"SD1?", "SD1[0-5]", "*R0", "SD*1?[012]*xx"
This function uses one level of recursion per '*' in pattern. Since it calls _nothing_ else, and has _no_ explicit local variables, this
will not cause stack problems for any reasonable use here.
RETURNS
0 on match, 1 otherwise.
AUTHOR
Jeff Garzik
Author.
COPYRIGHT Kernel Hackers Manual 3.10 June 2014 GLOB_MATCH(9)