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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to remove fields space and append next line to previous line.? Post 302899056 by Don Cragun on Friday 25th of April 2014 05:31:58 PM
Old 04-25-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by cumeh1624
Code:
awk 'BEGIN{FS = "Ç"}
NR == 1 {p = $0; next}
NF > 1 {print p; p = $0}
NF <= 1 {p = (p " " $0)}
END {print p}' input.txt > output.txt

This is what the input data file looks like with broken lines

Code:
Code:
29863       Ç890000000       Ç543209911           ÇCHNGOHG
Ç000000001   Ç055                  Ç 2014 04 24 00 00 00PMÇ
 
01 89765              Ç708364680             Ç736454                ÇCHNGDONG
Ç093737464Ç 2014 04 24 01 12 00PMÇ

Expected format after transformation should look like this

Code:
Code:
29863Ç890000000Ç543209911ÇCHNGOHGÇ000000001Ç055Ç2014 04 24 00 00 00PMÇ
 
89765Ç708364680Ç736454ÇCHNGDONGÇ093737464Ç2014 04 24 01 12 00PMÇ

Thanks,
cumeh1624
I'm still lost. Please describe in English the transformations that you are trying to make.

It appears that you want to remove leading and trailing spaces in a field, but keep spaces in the middle of a field.

It appears that you want to join all sets of adjacent lines that contain any field separators. (Is it all adjacent input lines, or pairs of input lines that are to be joined?)

Will blank or empty lines separate each set of lines that you want to join?

It appears that you want to leave lines with no field separators unchanged. (In your example there is a blank line. Does this also apply to empty lines?)

I see no pattern that would explain why the 01<space> marked in red in input.txt was removed in output.txt. Please explain in English what the logic is for removing non-<space> characters from some fields!

If two lines to be joined don't have a field separator as the last character of the first line or as the first character of the second line, is anything supposed to be added to the line where the lines are joined? (Perhaps a <space> character?)
 

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BEGIN(7)                                                           SQL Commands                                                           BEGIN(7)

NAME
BEGIN - start a transaction block SYNOPSIS
BEGIN [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ transaction_mode [, ...] ] where transaction_mode is one of: ISOLATION LEVEL { SERIALIZABLE | REPEATABLE READ | READ COMMITTED | READ UNCOMMITTED } READ WRITE | READ ONLY DESCRIPTION
BEGIN initiates a transaction block, that is, all statements after a BEGIN command will be executed in a single transaction until an explicit COMMIT [commit(7)] or ROLLBACK [rollback(7)] is given. By default (without BEGIN), PostgreSQL executes transactions in ``autocom- mit'' mode, that is, each statement is executed in its own transaction and a commit is implicitly performed at the end of the statement (if execution was successful, otherwise a rollback is done). Statements are executed more quickly in a transaction block, because transaction start/commit requires significant CPU and disk activity. Execution of multiple statements inside a transaction is also useful to ensure consistency when making several related changes: other ses- sions will be unable to see the intermediate states wherein not all the related updates have been done. If the isolation level or read/write mode is specified, the new transaction has those characteristics, as if SET TRANSACTION [set_transac- tion(7)] was executed. PARAMETERS
WORK TRANSACTION Optional key words. They have no effect. Refer to SET TRANSACTION [set_transaction(7)] for information on the meaning of the other parameters to this statement. NOTES
START TRANSACTION [start_transaction(7)] has the same functionality as BEGIN. Use COMMIT [commit(7)] or ROLLBACK [rollback(7)] to terminate a transaction block. Issuing BEGIN when already inside a transaction block will provoke a warning message. The state of the transaction is not affected. To nest transactions within a transaction block, use savepoints (see SAVEPOINT [savepoint(7)]). For reasons of backwards compatibility, the commas between successive transaction_modes can be omitted. EXAMPLES
To begin a transaction block: BEGIN; COMPATIBILITY
BEGIN is a PostgreSQL language extension. It is equivalent to the SQL-standard command START TRANSACTION [start_transaction(7)], whose ref- erence page contains additional compatibility information. Incidentally, the BEGIN key word is used for a different purpose in embedded SQL. You are advised to be careful about the transaction semantics when porting database applications. SEE ALSO
COMMIT [commit(7)], ROLLBACK [rollback(7)], START TRANSACTION [start_transaction(7)], SAVEPOINT [savepoint(7)] SQL - Language Statements 2010-05-14 BEGIN(7)
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