Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting File Manipulation - UNIX script Post 302863625 by chandan.chaman on Tuesday 15th of October 2013 12:49:02 AM
Old 10-15-2013
Below code might help you.
Code:
awk -F 892  ' (++i) {print i + substr ($2,1,3)  }'  <filename>


Last edited by Franklin52; 10-15-2013 at 02:58 AM.. Reason: Please use code tags
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix Shell Novice - File Manipulation

Hi, I am brand new to unix and am hoping someone can start me in the right direction. I want to be able to put the results of a file command such as wc -l filename into a variable which I can then use to test against another variable...i.e. I need to show the nth line of a file, but need to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nmullane
3 Replies

2. Linux

string manipulation in unix

Hi, I have a question . I have script which gets info from db2 engine. The script is cat sample_substitute.sh CNTR_NM=`db2 -x "select CONTAINER_NAME ,usable_pages from table( SNAPSHOT_CONTAINER('TST103',-1)) as SNAPSHOT_CONTAINER, syscat.tablespaces where tablespace_name = tbspace and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: capri_drm
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl script file manipulation

Please let me know.. How to manipulate the data from two files..? I have two files, file1 has two columns one is variable and second is description. file2 has five columns first column is variable and last one is description..Appreciate the help I need to overwrite the description from file1... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ddk2oo5
5 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

UNIX - File/Table/Data manipulation

Hi, I have a table (e.g.): a 1 e 4 5 6 b 2 r 4 4 2 c 5 r 3 7 1 d 9 t 4 4 9 . . What I need to do is to set the values of some values in column 2 to negative values. For example, the values 2 and 9 should become -2 and -9 in the modified file. How should I go about... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pc2001
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script text file manipulation.

Hello, I have mysql binary file which logs all the database queries and i to insert all queries log in to database. First i coverted binary file to text file. and start playing with it. Text file contains following queries, some samples are, SET INSERT_ID=1; INSERT INTO test... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mirfan
0 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Difficult problem: Complex text file manipulation in bash script.

I don't know if this is a big issue or not, but I'm having difficulties. I apoligize for the upcoming essay :o. I'm writing a script, similar to a paint program that edits images, but in the form of ANSI block characters. The program so far is working. I managed to save the image into a file,... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: tinman47
14 Replies

7. AIX

Unix File name manipulation

I need a script that will raname the following file names that beging with 08078* in unix as follows: Rename 08078-08201103-H00044-CA.835 as follows: 08078-110820-H000440CA.835 Bascially it will do this: 1) Keep the first 6 positons. 2) Move the yr from the file name to be the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrn6430
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help with file manipulation script

I am a UNIX newbee . I have been doing some reading lately but really need help with an an urgent requirement.After almost two days of googling I end up with 0 luck. Hopefully a guru on here will be able to help me out. Here is my requirement: I have 20 files in a directory with detail records... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeyd
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Manipulation of file data with UNIX

Hello , How all doing today.. I have a little doubt in Unix (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: adisky123
6 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Stream manipulation in UNIX shell scripting

i have a file something like this : start: 01:00:00 01:30:00 02:30:00 05:30:00 end: 01:13:00 02:00:00 02:40:00 05:45:00 and i want (end - start) total run time in below format: run: 00:13:00 00:30:00 00:10:00 00:15:00 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Acme
4 Replies
TAPECALC(1)						      General Commands Manual						       TAPECALC(1)

NAME
tapecalc - full-screen editing calculator USAGE
tapecalc [options] [file-specifications] SYNOPSIS
Tapecalc is a fixed-point calculator that operates as a full-screen editor. DESCRIPTION
Tapecalc performs fixed-point computation. It is designed for use as a checkbook or expense-account balancing tool. Tapecalc maintains a running result for each operation. You may scroll to any position in the expression list and modify the list. Enter data by typing numbers (with optional decimal point), separated by operators. An output transcript may be saved and reloaded for further editing. Scripts are loaded from left to right (with the "output" processed first). OPTIONS
Command line options of tapecalc are: -h Prints the list of options. -i interval Sets compounding interval for interest computation. -o script Specify file in which to save output transcript. -p num Sets precision (number of digits after the decimal place). OPERATIONS
Computations: The operators are all single-character: + begins an addition - begins a subtraction ~ negates the result * begins a multiplication / begins a division % begins an interest computation (uses interval): rate=number. $ begins a sales-tax computation: rate=number. ( opening parenthesis. This may enclose a unary '-', more parentheses, or data (implicit unary '+'). ) closing parenthesis, expects another operator, not data. = flushes out the current number, forces re-computation of the running result. A space flushes out the current number-input, and (by default) sets the next operator to be the same as the current one. You may repeat the last arithmetic operation of any type: a repeats the last '+' (default 0). s repeats the last '-' (default 0). n repeats the last '~'. m repeats the last '*' (default 1). d repeats the last '/' (default 1). i repeats the last '%' (default 4). t repeats the last '$' (default 4). You may toggle the prefix operator of any number by typing a single character: A toggles the operator to '+'. S toggles the operator to '-'. N toggles the operator to '~'. M toggles the operator to '*'. D toggles the operator to '/'. I toggles the operator to '%'. T toggles the operator to '$'. Editing: As you enter data, you may edit it. A backspace deletes the last digit of the current number (if it is visible). Use the arrow keys or vi-style 'h' and 'l' to move left and right within the line. Other editing commands include u undoes the last x/X command (restricted to restoring the current data only). x deletes the current data. If the data is null, deletes the following line. X deletes the current data. If the data is null, deletes the preceding line and moves up. o opens a new line after the current line. O opens a new line before the current line. # edit the associated comment. An "open" permits you to insert a new operator and data into the expression list. You may type an operator character (e.g., '+'), and continue with the new data, or an operator-repeat (e.g., 'A'). In either case, you may edit the new data, just as you would the old data. A 'u' (or other toggle, such as 'o', 'O', or 'q') typed after an open will undo the open (and close it). Scrolling/cursor movement: H move to the top line on the screen. M move to the middle line on the screen. L move to the last line on the screen CTL/F scroll forward one screen. CTL/B scroll backward one screen. j move forward one line. k move backward one line. z<CR> move the current line to the top of the screen. z. move the current line to the middle of the screen. z- move the current line to the bottom of the screen. Like vi, tapecalc allows you to jump to a particular line with a ":" command :$ jumps to the last entry :1 jumps to the first entry. Scripts: Transcript files are formatted to permit line-oriented entries: <operator><value><tab><ignored><tab># comment The transcripts saved by tapecalc contain the running result in the "ignored" part. To exit without saving a transcript, type 'Q'. A nor- mal exit, by typing 'q', saves the list of operators, data (and running result) in the specified file. You can read and write scripts without leaving tapecalc. reads a script at the current entry :e file clears the current script and reads a script from the file. :f shows the current script name. :r file :w file writes a script to the specified file. ENVIRONMENT
Tapecalc runs in a portable UNIX(R) environment. FILES
Tapecalc is a single binary module, with a help file tapecalc.hlp installed in the same directory. FUTURE WORK
It would be nice to be able to change the precision within the program. In particular, the interest and sales tax computations would be more useful if their precision was independent of the running total. AUTHOR
Thomas Dickey SEE ALSO
wc (1), vi (1) TAPECALC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:22 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy