Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: awk manipulation
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting awk manipulation Post 302902156 by RudiC on Monday 19th of May 2014 04:39:08 AM
Old 05-19-2014
Shouldn't be too difficult for yourself when I look at your membership. Anyhow, try:
Code:
awk '{$2=$10}1' file

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk manipulation

Hi , what a wonderful command but so hard to maintain ! i have a file like that : 03/07/2006 05:58:45 03/07/2006 06:58:45 03/07/2006 07:58:50 03/07/2006 08:58:50 and i want to read it and keep only the lines with 3rd field less than 07:00:00 writing it in a second file ! ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nicol
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

File manipulation using AWK

Hi All, I have a file having content, $ cat data1.txt 20060620 142 62310 959400 A 5.00 20060620 142 62310 959400 B 3.00 20060620 143 62310 959401 A 7.00 20060620 143 62310 959401 B 4.00 20060620 144 62310 959402 A 8.00 20060620 144 62310... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rinku11
6 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk string manipulation

Here is my awk code in a shell script: localRecDir=/somedirectory/ # awk -v LRD="$localRecDir" '{out = sprintf ("%s0000000%s"),LRD,substr($3,4) ; print > out; close(out)}' *.log Here is the contents of my *.log file I am trying to parse with my script: 000007 0110 07-0001583 000007 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zoo591
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

File manipulation with awk

Could you please help me to achieve the below: In a file I need to convert the multiple lines whose filed 1 and field 5 values are same into a single line but with the field 4 values comma separed as mentioned below. Fileds after 5 shall be discarded. Also here by default all other remaining... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: dhams
6 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

$0 manipulation in awk

OK, so if $0 represent the entire record... can I change $2 and will that be reflected back in $0? I think the following answers that YES, it does work. But is there anything I should be thinking about prior to doing this? What I am actually doing is part of 5 pages of scripting and awk... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: joeyg
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

File manipulation in awk

I have got a sample file below(colon(:) is the field separator) . The data is like col1:col2:col3:col4:col5:col6:col7:col8:col9:col10 11:12:012:aa:a a a:10::111:12: 311:321:320:caad::321:31:3333:: 2:22:222::bbb::cads::2222:20 :::::12:1234::12: :5:55::555:5555::::55550 Now I want to find... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: rinku11
9 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

String manipulation using awk

I have the following string 512m512m I'm trying to split the string using awk awk '{ split(512m512m,a,"m") print $a; $a }' Sometimes the string could be 1024g1024g or 2048G2048G or 512M1024G how can i change the fieldsep to be a alphabet irrespective of case, and also... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramky79
8 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk manipulation

hello I have example file AA 11 BB 22 CC 33 And what I expect to have -a AA=11 -a BB=22 -a CC=33 can anyone help how I have this using awk? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vikus
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Array manipulation with awk?

Dear friends, I'm wondering if we could do some simple math on two arrays with the same size? a1 Fe -0.21886700 -0.01417600 -0.24390300 C 2.20529400 0.89434100 -0.61061000 C -1.89657700 -0.74793000 -0.07778200 C ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: liuzhencc
8 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk manipulation

Hello all, Can someone help me with write part of code in awk to merge 2 files? Go through file1 check if number from column 3 exist in file2(column 2) if yes take value from column 1 and add to column 4 in file1. If value in column 4 exist in file1 skip it. file1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikus
2 Replies
pilot-addresses(1)					      General Commands Manual						pilot-addresses(1)

NAME
pilot-addresses - read and write address book databases to and from a Palm handheld device, such as those made from Palm, Handspring, Han- dera, TRGPro, Sony or other Palm Compatible Handheld PDA device SYNOPSIS
pilot-addresses -p <port> [-c category ] [-d category ] [-r file | -w file ] (Note that some options are not shown above) DESCRIPTION
pilot-addresses allows the user to read all entries in the Palm address book database, write new entries into the database, and delete a category or delete all entries in the database. TARGET DEVICE
The default serial device used to communicate with a Palm is /dev/pilot. If the environment variable $PILOTPORT is set, its value will override the default. A serial device specified on the command-line will be used regardless of any $PILOTPORT setting. OPTIONS
Several options exist, including... -p --port <port>, Use device file port to communicate with the Palm handheld device. If this is not specified, will look for the $PILOTPORT environ- ment variable. If both are not found, will fall back to /dev/pilot. -h --help Display help synopsis for pilot-addresses -v --version Display version of pilot-addresses -a Augments fields in address book records with additional information. The augmented information is placed before and separated from the field with a semi-colon, (;). Augmented information includes: category_name - placed in front of each record or ["Work" | "Home" | "Fax" | "Other" | "E-mail" | "Main" | "Pager" | "Mobile" ] - placed in front of each phone number field. Empty fields are not augmented. -c category Install records to category category by default. Normally pilot-addresses uses Unfiled as the default category. This option is over- ridden by the category specified in the record with the -a option. -d category Delete all records in the specified category before installing new records. -D Delete all address book records in all categories. Obviously, be very careful with this one. -e Escape all special characters with a backslash. This enables you to read and write entries with newline characters in a field or note. -q Causes pilot-addresses to be quiet and not prompt you to press the HotSync button. -r file Reads records from file and install them to the Palm address book database. (Use the -w file to get a template file for input records.) -t delim Include category in each record, use the delimiter specified to separate all fields of a record. Delimiters are specified as fol- lows: 3=tab, 2=;, 1=,. This overrides the default delimiter of comma between fields and semi-colon between a field's augmented information. (Please note that this may generate confusing results when used with the -a option.) -T Write a header line with field titles as the first line of the data file. -w file Get all address book records from the Palm address book database and writes them into file USAGE
The program will connect to a target device and port, prompt the user to HotSync, and perform the requested read or write operation speci- fied by the user. EXAMPLES
To write all address records in a Palm to the file addrbook.csv: pilot-addresses -w addrbook.csv or pilot-addresses -p /dev/irnine -w addrbook.csv To read the address book records in the file addrbook.csv and install them on a Palm: pilot-addresses -r addrbook.csv To read the address book records in the file addrbook.csv and place them into the Palm address book database category Special after first deleting all current records in the Special category on the palm: pilot-addresses -c Special -d Special -r addrbook.csv SEE ALSO
pilot-link(7) KNOWN BUGS
pilot-addresses has no known bugs. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs at http://bugs.pilot-link.org/ AUTHOR
pilot-addresses originally written by Kenneth Albanowski, manual page was written by Robert Wittig <bob.wittig@gt.org>. Free Software Foundation Palm Computing Device Tools pilot-addresses(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:58 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy