The given code will still work even after you have made the said changes to the input file. if you only want the four hex digits, make the following change:
Hi all,
I have a small script to convert my HexaDecimal Input to Decimal as output.
#!/bin/ksh
hd=00208060
dec=`printf %d $hd`
echo $dec
Output of the above program:
printf: 00208060 not completely converted
16
But my expected output is "2130016".
How can i acheive this.
I... (2 Replies)
Let's suppose i have a hexadecimal array with 16 cells.for example
b3e2d5f636111780
i want to convert it to an array of ascii characters(in C) so that
i can reduce total size of the file i want to put it in.
But i am afraid i have not fully understand the difference between ascii
and hex(i... (3 Replies)
I have a txt file with several columns and i want to peform an operation on two columns and output it to a new txt file .
file.txt
900.00000 1 1 1
500.00000
500.00000
100000.000
4
4
1.45257346E-07 899.10834 ... (4 Replies)
Hello *nix specialists,
Im working for a non profit organisation in Germany to transport DSL over WLAN to people in areas without no DSL. We are using Linksys WRT 54 router with DD-WRT firmware There are at the moment over 180 router running but we have to change some settings next time. So my... (7 Replies)
Hi Guys,
Is it possible to convert the hexadecimal to Binary by unix command.....I could not figure out....
If I need to convert AF6D to binary...what could be the way to do?
Thanks in advance!!
---------- Post updated at 02:57 AM ---------- Previous update was at 02:42 AM ----------
I... (6 Replies)
How can I convert hexadecimal values to Binary from the second field to the end
Input:
WS-2 23 345 235
DT-3 45 4A3 000
pp-2 76 300 E4
Output:
WS-2 100011 1101000101 1000110101
DT-3 1000101 10010100011 000
pp-2 1110110 1100000000 11100100 (16 Replies)
Hi, i tried to do this script:
Generate a "unique" 6-digit hexadecimal identifier for your computer. Do not use the flawed hostid command. Hint: md5sum /etc/passwd, then select the first 6 digits of output.
Fom 0 to 9 and from a to f
#!/bin/bash
clear
echo ""
echo "--------------------"... (4 Replies)
Hello
I'm working on a script to list all ipv6 from given address
so I've run this script which create hex part of ipv6
STR2=159
END2=200
SUM2=`expr $END2 - $STR2`
for ((i=STR2;i<=END2;++i)); do
x=$( printf "%x" $i ) ; echo $x
echo -e "::"$x >> netpart.txt
done
output is :
::9f... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nimafire
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
uniunmask
UNIUNMASK(1) General Commands Manual UNIUNMASK(1)NAME
uniunmask - XOR bits or substitute glyphs in a GNU Unifont file.
SYNOPSIS
uniunmask [-iinput_file] [-ooutput_file]
DESCRIPTION
uniunmask reads a GNU Unifont .hex file. As it reads the font file, it scans for code points matching entries in the "masks.hex" and "sub-
stitutes.hex" files. "masks.hex" and "substitutes.hex" are also in GNU Unifont .hex format, ordered by Unicode code point (the hexadecimal
number to the left of the colon on each line).
If a code point is encountered from "substitutes.hex", the input code point in the original .hex file is ignored (as is any entry with the
same code point in "masks.hex") and the glyph from "substitutes.hex" is written to the output file.
Otherwise, if a code point is encountered from "masks.hex", the input glyph in the original .hex file is XORed with the bits in the
"masks.hex" entry. The result of this XOR operation is written to the output file.
OPTIONS -i Specify the input file. The default is stdin.
-o Specify the output file. The default is stdout.
FILES
masks.hex, substitutes.hex, *.hex GNU Unifont font files
SEE ALSO bdfimplode(1), hex2bdf(1), hex2bdf-split(1), hex2sfd(1), hexbraille(1), hexdraw(1), hexmerge(1), johab2ucs2(1), unibmp2hex(1), unicover-
age(1), unidup(1), unihex2bmp(1), unipagecount(1)AUTHOR
uniunmask was written by Paul Hardy.
LICENSE
uniunmask is Copyright (C) 2007 Paul Hardy, and is released under version 2 of the GNU General Public License, or (at your option) a later
version.
BUGS
No known real bugs exist, except that this software does not perform extensive error checking on its input files. If they're not in the
format of the original GNU Unifont hex file, all bets are off.
2008 Jul 6 UNIUNMASK(1)