Hi All,
I have an input below. If the term in the 1st column is equal, print the last row which 1st column is equal.In the below example, it's " 0001 k= 27 " and " 0004 k= 6 " (depicted in bold). Those terms in 1st column which are not repetitive are to be printed as well. Can any body help me... (9 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a lot of files with extension ".o" and I would like to extract the 10th line after (last) occurrence of a given string in each of the files.
I tried:
$ grep "string_to_look_for" *.o -A 10 | tail -1
but it gives the occurrence in the last file with extension .o
... (1 Reply)
Lets say I have file.txt:
(Product:Price:QuantityAvailable) (: as delimiter)
Chocolate:5:5
Banana:33:3
I am doing a edit/update function.
I want to change the Quantity Available, so I tried using the SED command to replace 5, but my Price which is also 5 is changed instead.
(for the Banana... (13 Replies)
Guys,
I am trying the following:
i have a log file of a webbap which logs in the following pattern:
2011-08-14 21:10:04,535 blablabla ERROR blablabla
bla
bla
bla
bla
2011-08-14 21:10:04,535 blablabla ERROR blablabla
bla
bla
bla
... (6 Replies)
Hi, i have file f1.txt with data like:
CHECK
a
b
CHECK
c
d
CHECK
e
f
JOB_START
....
I want to match the last occurrence of 'CHECK' until the end of the file.
I can use awk:
awk '/^CHECK/ { buf = "" } { buf = buf "\n" $0 } END { print buf }' f1.txt | tail +2Is there a cleaner way of... (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)
I apologize if it was asked before but I couldn't find something related.
I want to replace 2 strings in a file
e.g
pwddb=Lar1wod (need to replace string after =)
pwdapp=Wde2xe (need to replace string after =)
AND in same file want to find last occurrence of a string (SR2-134561),... (2 Replies)
echo 'String#1 and String#2' | egrep -o -m 1 'String#.{1}'
String#1
String#2
I'm trying to just match the first occurrence of 'String#' + 1 character. I thought the "-m 1" switch would do that for me. Instead I get both occurrences. Can somebody provide some insight?
Thanks! (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I have an input file as below. I would like to count the occurrence of pattern matching 8th field for each line.
Input:
field_01 field_02 field_03 field_04 field_05 field_06 field_07 field_08
TA T TA T TA TA TA... (3 Replies)
Hi, i have file file.txt with data like:
START
03:11:30 a
03:11:40 b
END
START
03:13:30 eee
03:13:35 fff
END
jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
START
03:14:30 eee
03:15:30 fff
END
ggggggggggg
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
I want the below output
START (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jyotshna
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
colorset
COLORS(3) libbash colors Library Manual COLORS(3)NAME
colors -- libbash library for setting tty colors.
SYNOPSIS
colorSet <color>
colorReset
colorPrint [<indent>] <color> <text>
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color> <text>
DESCRIPTION
General
colors is a collection of functions that make it very easy to put colored text on tty.
The function list:
colorSet Sets the color of the prints to the tty to COLOR
colorReset Resets current tty color back to normal
colorPrint Prints TEXT in the color COLOR indented by INDENT (without adding a newline)
colorPrintN The same as colorPrint, but trailing newline is added
Detailed interface description follows.
Available colors:
Green
Red
Yellow
White
The color parameter is non-case-sensitive (i.e. RED, red, ReD, and all the other forms are valid and are the same as Red).
FUNCTIONS DESCRIPTIONS
colorSet <color>
Sets the current printing color to color.
colorReset
Resets current tty color back to normal.
colorPrint [<indent>] <color>
Prints text using the color color indented by indent (without adding a newline).
Parameters:
<indent>
The column to move to before start printing. This parameter is optional. If ommitted - start output from current cursor position.
<color>
The color to use.
<color>
The text to print.
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color>
The same as colorPrint, except a trailing newline is added.
EXAMPLES
Printing a green 'Hello World' with a newline:
Using colorSet:
$ colorSet green
$ echo 'Hello World'
$ colorReset
Using colorPrint:
$ colorPrint 'Hello World'; echo
Using colorPrintN:
$ colorPrintN 'Hello World'
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <gil@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), libbash(1)Linux Epoch Linux