Thanks Akshay for the code , Apologies for not mentioning the delimeter but you had it right pipe delimiter is the one which I thought as well .
Also I think I got confused with my input and output .
Desired output
The strings need not be delimiter with | . Apologies for confusion .
Hi
I have a pipe-delimited file where I eventually need to replace a string stored on the 3th field on a specific record.
This is how the file looks like:
A|Mike|Lvl 1|...
B|...
A|Maria|Lvl 1|...
C|...
B|...
A|Jimmy|Lvl 2|...
C|...
A|Carry|Lvl 0|...
C|...
B|...
A|John|Lvl 8|...... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have data in a file something like this -
UNB+UNOA:1+006415160:1+AR0000012360:ZZ+080701:0552+2++DELFOR++++T'UNH+2+DELFOR:D:97A:UN
Here, the delimiters used are + , : and ' . I have a set of such files in which these delimiters vary from one file to another.
I am developing a... (4 Replies)
Hello,
this thread is more about scripting style than a specific issue.
I've to grep from a output some lines and from them obtain a specific entry delimited by < and >.
This is my way :
1) grep -i user list | awk '{FS="<";print $NF}' | sed -e 's/>//g'
2) grep -i user list | cut -d","... (10 Replies)
I'm trying to do a split using two delimiters. The first delimiter is ": " (or we could call it :\s). The second is "\n".
How can or these delimiters so I can toss the values into an array without issue?
I tried @array = split /:\s|\n/, $myvar;
This doesn't seem to be working.
Any an... (3 Replies)
Line from input file
a : b : c " d " e " f : g : h " i " j " k " l
output
k b a
Its taking 7th word when " is the delimiter, 2nd and 1st word when : is the delimiter and returning all in one line.... I am on solaris
Thanks..... (1 Reply)
Hello
I have a csv file which I need to insert addtional commas into. The csv is of the format
field1,field2,field3,field4,...etc...,field13,field14
I need to add extra commas in each record so that the final output looks like
... (1 Reply)
I have a file which is separated by delimiter "|", but the prob is one of my column do contain delimiter as description so how can i differentiate it?
PS : the delmiter does have backslash coming before it, if occurring in column
Annual|Beleagured|Desc|Denver... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikhil jain
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
ruptime
ruptime(1c)ruptime(1c)Name
ruptime - show host status of local machines
Syntax
ruptime [ options ] [ machinename ]
Description
The command gives a status line like for each machine on the local network. If a machinename is given, the status of only the named
machine is given. These status lines are formed from packets broadcast by each host on the network once a minute.
Machines for which no status report has been received for 5 minutes are shown as being down.
Options-a Users idle an hour or more are not counted unless this option is specified.
-d Display only those hosts that are considered down.
-l Sort the status list by load average. If more than one sort option is given, uses the last one.
-r Show only hosts that are up and running.
-t Sort the status list by uptime. If more than one sort option is given, uses the last one.
-u Sort the status list by number of users. If more than one sort option is given, uses the last one.
-nn Show only those hosts with nn or more users.
Restrictions
Because the daemon sends its information in broadcast packets it generates a large amount of network traffic. On large networks the extra
traffic may be objectionable. Therefore, the daemon is disabled by default. To make use of the daemon for both the local and remote
hosts, remove the comment symbols (#) from in front of the lines specifying in the file.
If the daemon is not running on a remote machine, the machine may incorrectly appear to be down when you use the command to determine its
status. See the reference page for more information.
If a system has more than 40 users logged in at once, the number of users displayed by the command is incorrect. Users who login to a
machine after that point fail to increment the user count that appears in the output of the command. This is due to the maximum size limit
of an Ethernet packet, which is 1500 bytes, and the fact that the daemon must broadcast its information in a single packet.
Files
/usr/spool/rwho/whod.* Information about other machines
See Alsorwho(1c), rwhod(8c)ruptime(1c)