Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Lists in awk
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Lists in awk Post 302855127 by bjoern456 on Thursday 19th of September 2013 05:59:33 AM
Old 09-19-2013
Lists in awk

Hi togehter!

I would like to write an awk script which prints the first column divided by the sum of the second column:

So if this is my list

Code:
1 2
2 1
3 1
4 1

it should print a list like this:

Code:
1/5
2/5
3/5
4/5

My idea was to use END like this:

Code:
 awk '{sum+=$2;} END {print $1/sum}'

But it doesnt work... can someone help me?

Thanks!!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Question on lists

I'm fairly new to shell scripting and would like to know if what I am seeking to do is possible in shell. I'm trying to make a list of strings. The list will be looped through and each member of the list will be used to pass a parsing option to python. My script looks something like this: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nacre
3 Replies

2. AIX

grep using lists?

I have a file that contain a list of files. How can I use grep to search the files in the list for a specific pattern? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbbngowc
2 Replies

3. Programming

C++ programming using lists

To test this program it must create 2 integer lists - list1, list2 - and then read and process a series of list commands from a file named "data.txt". Each command and any associated values, list number, value appears on a separate line. All I can do is get it to input the integers and then... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tiger13e
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell Script to Create non-duplicate lists from two lists

File_A contains Strings: a b c d File_B contains Strings: a c z Need to have script written in either sh or ksh. Derive resultant files (File_New_A and File_New_B) from lists File_A and File_B where string elements in File_New_A and File_New_B are listed below. Resultant... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mlv_99
7 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Using foreach with two lists

Hi everybody, I'm trying to use a foreach command with two lists. The file.txt looks like this: var1: 100 200 300 var2: 3 6 9 I'm trying to use a foreach command to associate the two variables together. My script looks like this: #! /bin/tcsh set a=(`cat file.txt | grep 'var1' | cut -d... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: SimonWhite
8 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

combining two lists

Hi, So I I received two lists for my merchandise and both are similar but differences do occur. I want to combine two lists that have similar names but I dont want the similar name to come up twice because I will end up purchasing two of those items. Heres an example below (file is massive). ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kylle345
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

get the lists

I expert, I may cross post something similar but I dirtyed my quesion somehow to be clear in the thread #cat file1 88dee gcc: Grok for callconvention-hard to enable hard float a2ad2 eglibc: package mtrace separately 61487 python: bump PR of packages after update of distutils.bbclass... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yanglei_fage
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Issue with Lists

Hey guys, so I wrote this simple script. The first time I typed it all out, I had the issue where whatever choice I entered, it would simply tell me it was a "bad selection" aka the else output. I redid everything, and now no matter the choice, it does the backup option.. My brain hurts, and... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: jakelawson44
12 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed/awk to tell differences between two lists

Greetings all, I have two output lists from a log that I am working with. Below are the examples. except, the lists are in the thousands. list1.out FEA1234 FEA4343 FEA3453 FEA3413 FEA34A3 FEA3433 .... list2.out FEA1235 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeffs42885
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Combining lists

Hello everybody. My operating system is Fedora30, shell - bash I faced combining lists. I will be glad for help regarding strings, arrays and so on. The bottom line is as follows. It is necessary to combine each element from the first list with elements from the second. if the second is longer... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nezabudka
4 Replies
AMPLOT(8)						  System Administration Commands						 AMPLOT(8)

NAME
amplot - visualize the behavior of Amanda SYNOPSIS
amplot [-b] [-c] [-e] [-g] [-l] [-p] [-t T] amdump_files DESCRIPTION
Amplot reads an amdump output file that Amanda generates each run (e.g. amdump.1) and translates the information into a picture format that may be used to determine how your installation is doing and if any parameters need to be changed. Amplot also prints out amdump lines that it either does not understand or knows to be warning or error lines and a summary of the start, end and total time for each backup image. Amplot is a shell script that executes an awk program (amplot.awk) to scan the amdump output file. It then executes a gnuplot program (amplot.g) to generate the graph. The awk program is written in an enhanced version of awk, such as GNU awk (gawk(1) version 2.15 or later) or nawk(1). During execution, amplot generates a few temporary files that gnuplot uses. These files are deleted at the end of execution. See the amanda(8) man page for more details about Amanda. OPTIONS
-b Generate b/w postscript file (need -p). -c Compress amdump_files after plotting. -e Extend the X (time) axis if needed. -g Direct gnuplot output directly to the X11 display (default). -p Direct postscript output to file YYYYMMDD.ps (opposite of -g). -l Generate landscape oriented output (needs -p). -t T Set the right edge of the plot to be T hours. The amdump_files may be in various compressed formats (compress, gzip, pact, compact). INTERPRETATION
The figure is divided into a number of regions. There are titles on the top that show important statistical information about the configuration and from this execution of amdump. In the figure, the X axis is time, with 0 being the moment amdump was started. The Y axis is divided into 5 regions: QUEUES: How many backups have not been started, how many are waiting on space in the holding disk and how many have been transferred successfully to tape. %BANDWIDTH: Percentage of allowed network bandwidth in use. HOLDING DISK: The higher line depicts space allocated on the holding disk to backups in progress and completed backups waiting to be written to tape. The lower line depicts the fraction of the holding disk containing completed backups waiting to be written to tape including the file currently being written to tape. The scale is percentage of the holding disk. TAPE: Tape drive usage. %DUMPERS: Percentage of active dumpers. The idle period at the left of the graph is time amdump is asking the machines how much data they are going to dump. This process can take a while if hosts are down or it takes them a long time to generate estimates. BUGS
Reports lines it does not recognize, mainly error cases but some are legitimate lines the program needs to be taught about. SEE ALSO
amanda(8), amdump(8), gnuplot(1), compress(1), gzip(1) The Amanda Wiki: : http://wiki.zmanda.com/ AUTHORS
Olafur Gudmundsson <ogud@tis.com> Trusted Information Systems Stefan G. Weichinger <sgw@amanda.org> Amanda 3.3.3 01/10/2013 AMPLOT(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:26 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy