Thank you for your effort.
Please Let me explain again
I want to print for every value in column2:
- two rows if column1 is greater than 2 (rows with max. and min. value in column4)
- One row if column1 is <= 2( row with min. value in column4)
Can anyone help me to count number of occurrence of the strings based on column value. Say i have 300 files with 1000 record length from which i need to count the number of occurrence string which is existing from 213 to 219. Some may be unique and some may be repeated. (8 Replies)
if there's a file containing:
money king money queen money cat money also money king
all those strings are on one line in the file.
how can i find out how many times "money king" shows up in the line?
egrep -c "money king" wont work. (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have the following input in a file & need output as mentioned below(need counter of every occurance of field which is to be increased by 1).
Input:
919143110065
919143110065
919143110052
918648846132
919143110012
918648873782
919143110152
919143110152
919143110152... (2 Replies)
Hi,
let's say an input looks like:
A|C|C|D
A|C|I|E
A|B|I|C
A|T|I|B
as the title of the thread explains, I am trying to get something like:
1|A=4
2|C=2|B=1|T=1
3|I=3|C=1
4|D=1|E=1|C=1|B=1
i.e. a count of every character in each field (first column of output) independently, sorted... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
If i would like to process a file input as below:
col1 col2 col3 ...col100
1 A C E A ...
3 D E G A
5 T T A A
6 D C A G
how can i perform a for loop to count the occurences of letters in each column? (just like uniq -c ) in every column.
on top of that, i would also like... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I have a table that looks like what is shown below:
AA
BB
CC
XY
PQ
RS
AA
BB
CC
XY
RS
I would like the total counts depending on the set they belong to:
if search pattern is in {AA, BB, CC} --> count them as Type1 | wc -l (3 Replies)
Hello all,
I would like to ask your help here:
I've a huge file that has 2 columns. A part of it is:
sorted.txt:
kss23 rml.67lkj
kss23 zhh.6gf
kss23 nhd.09.fdd
kss23 hp.767.88.89
fl67 nmdsfs.56.df.67
fl67 kk.fgf.98.56.n
fl67 bgdgdfg.hjj.879.d
fl66 kl..hfh.76.ghg
fl66... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
let's say an input looks like:
C1,C2,C3,C4,C5,C6,C7,C8,C9,C10,C11
----------------------------------
1|0123452|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0156123|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0178903|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0127896|C501|Z|Z|Z|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
1|0981678|C501|X|X|X|E|E|E|E|E|E|E
... (6 Replies)
Hello Team,
I need your help on the following:
My input file a.txt is as below:
3330690|373846|108471
3330690|373846|108471
0640829|459725|100001
0640829|459725|100001
3330690|373847|108471
Here row 1 and row 2 of column 1 are identical but corresponding column 2 value are... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: angshuman
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
pamdeinterlace
pamdeinterlace(1) General Commands Manual pamdeinterlace(1)NAME
pamdeinterlace - remove ever other row from a PAM/PNM image
SYNOPSIS
pamdeinterlace [-takeodd] [-takeeven] N [infile]
You can use the minimum unique abbreviation of the options. You can use two hyphens instead of one. You can separate an option name from
its value with white space instead of an equals sign.
DESCRIPTION
pamdeinterlace Removes all the even-numbered or odd-numbered rows from the input PNM or PAM image. Specify which with the -takeeven and
-takeodd options.
This can be useful if the image is a video capture from an interlaced video source. In that case, each row shows the subject 1/60 second
before or after the two rows that surround it. If the subject is moving, this can detract from the quality of the image.
Because the resulting image is half the height of the input image, you will then want to use pamstretch or pnmscale to restore it to its
normal height:
pamdeinterlace myimage.ppm | pamstretch -yscale=2 >newimage.ppm
OPTIONS -takeodd
Take the odd-numbered rows from the input and put them in the output. The rows are numbered starting at zero, so the first row in
the output is the second row from the input. You cannot specify both -takeeven and -takeodd.
-takeeven
Take the even-numbered rows from the input and put them in the output. The rows are numbered starting at zero, so the first row in
the output is the first row from the input. This is the default. You cannot specify both -takeeven and -takeodd.
SEE ALSO pamstretch(1), pnmscale(1)AUTHOR
put by Bryan Henderson in the public domain in 2001
11 November 2001 pamdeinterlace(1)