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Full Discussion: Finding an average
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Finding an average Post 302862481 by Manu1234567 on Thursday 10th of October 2013 09:40:25 PM
Old 10-10-2013
Thank uSmilie One more thing it is more relating to the input from pipes...for example
echo 5 3 | sh my_code. What I need to add to my code for accepting input from pipes? Would appreciate if you tell what I need to add in my piece of code...thanks

Code:
check(){
    if [ -z "$1" ];
  then echo "No user input";
exit;fi
       }

check $1
sum=0
n=0
t=0
for i in $*
do
          if [ -f $i ]
                  then
                  while read line
                        do
                       for j in $line
                                do

                           n=` expr $n + 1 `
                           sum=` expr $sum + $j `
                                        done
                                        done< $i
           else
                    sum=` expr $sum + $i `
                    n=` expr $n + 1 `
           fi

          done


         average=$(echo "scale=2; $sum/$n" | bc -l )
        # average=` expr $sum / $n `
         echo $average

 

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sum(n)							     Cyclic Redundancy Checks							    sum(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
sum - Calculate a sum(1) compatible checksum SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.2 package require sum ?1.1.0? ::crc::sum ?-bsd | -sysv? ?-format fmt? ?-chunksize size? [ -filename file | -channel chan | string ] _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
This package provides a Tcl-only implementation of the sum(1) command which calculates a 16 bit checksum value from the input data. The BSD sum algorithm is used by default but the SysV algorithm is also available. COMMANDS
::crc::sum ?-bsd | -sysv? ?-format fmt? ?-chunksize size? [ -filename file | -channel chan | string ] The command takes string data or a file name or a channel and returns a checksum value calculated using the sum(1) algorithm. The result is formatted using the format(n) specifier provided or as an unsigned integer (%u) by default. OPTIONS
-sysv The SysV algorithm is fairly naive. The byte values are summed and any overflow is discarded. The lowest 16 bits are returned as the checksum. Input with the same content but different ordering will give the same result. -bsd This algorithm is similar to the SysV version but includes a bit rotation step which provides a dependency on the order of the data values. -filename name Return a checksum for the file contents instead of for parameter data. -channel chan Return a checksum for the contents of the specified channel. The channel must be open for reading and should be configured for binary translation. The channel will no be closed on completion. -chunksize size Set the block size used when reading data from either files or channels. This value defaults to 4096. -format string Return the checksum using an alternative format template. EXAMPLES
% crc::sum "Hello, World!" 37287 % crc::sum -format 0x%X "Hello, World!" 0x91A7 % crc::sum -file sum.tcl 13392 AUTHORS
Pat Thoyts BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems. Please report such in the category crc of the Tcllib SF Trackers [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883]. Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation. SEE ALSO
cksum(n), crc32(n), sum(1) KEYWORDS
checksum, cksum, crc, crc32, cyclic redundancy check, data integrity, security, sum COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2002, Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net> crc 1.1.0 sum(n)
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