11-08-2013
I don't care what kind of snippet this is, RudiC is correct. This snippet can't work (even if the variables are defined to reasonable values). You have two invocations of awk with no input specified. Presumably the 1st one will gobble up all of the data remaining in $iname/url.txt after the read in the while loop grabbed the 1st line. Then the 2nd awk will immediately hit end-of-file.
You came here asking for help.
You insulted the person who pointed out that the data you supplied was incomplete (thereby making analysis difficult).
This is a great way to discourage readers in this forum who might consider trying to help solve your problem from posting any other responses.
Last edited by Don Cragun; 11-08-2013 at 02:50 PM..
Reason: Fix typo
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
numsum
NUMSUM(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation NUMSUM(1)
NAME
numsum - numsum program file
SYNOPSIS
numsum [-iIcdhrsvxy] <FILE>
| numsum [-iIcdhrsvxy] (Input on STDIN from pipeline.)
numsum [-iIcdhrsvxy] (Input on STDIN. Use Ctrl-D to stop.)
DESCRIPTION
numsum will take all the numbers on stdin and return the sum of those numbers. Currently it only processes the first number on each line.
Besides positive numbers, it also handles negative numbers and numbers with decimals.
OPTIONS
-i Only return the integer portion of the final sum.
-I Only return the decimal portion of the final sum.
-c Print out the sum of each column.
-r Print out the sum of each row.
-x <n> Specify a comma seperated list of columns to print.
-y <n> Specify a comma seperated list of rows to print.
-s <string> Specify a string to use as a seperator for columns.
This defaults to be consecutive whitespace (s+).
-h Help: You're looking at it.
-V Increase verbosity.
-d Debug mode. For developers
-q Quiet mode, don't print any warnings.
EXAMPLES
Simply add up the numbers in a file.
$ numsum numbers.txt
4315
Enter your own numbers on STDIN. The last number is the answer.
$ numsum
4
21
98
100
223
Use it in a command pipeline.
$ ls -1s | grep .mp3 | numsum -c -x 5
72288
Add up the total byte count in a http log file.
$ cat access_log | awk {'print $10'} numsum
or
numsum -c -x 10 access_log
Add up the columns of numbers of a file.
$ cat columns
1 6 11 16 21
2 7 12 17 22
3 8 13 18 23
4 9 14 19 24
5 10 15 20 25
$ numsum -c columns
15 40 65 90 115
Add up the 1st, 2nd and 5th columns only.
$ numsum -c -x 1,2,5 columns
15 40 115
Add up the rows of numbers of a file.
$ numsum -r columns
55
60
65
70
75
Add up the 2nd and 4th rows.
$ numsum -r -y 2,4 columns
60
70
SEE ALSO
numaverage(1), numbound(1), numinterval(1), numnormalize(1), numgrep(1), numprocess(1), numrandom(1), numrange(1), numround(1)
COPYRIGHT
numsum is part of the num-utils package, which is copyrighted by Suso Banderas and released under the GPL license. Please read the COPYING
and LICENSE files that came with the num-utils package
Developers can read the GOALS file and contact me about providing
submitions or help for the project.
MORE INFO
More info on numsum can be found at:
http://suso.suso.org/programs/num-utils/
perl v5.10.1 2009-10-31 NUMSUM(1)