Hi,
I'm working with snmp, with a little script I'm able to obtain from a switch a list with a couple of values with this format
Port Mac
1 00:0A:0B:0C:0D:0E
....
(hundred of entries)
Now with a simple arp on a router I am able to obtain another list
00:0A:0B:0C:0D:0E... (20 Replies)
Hi may i ask how to accomplish this task:
I have 2 files which has multiple columns
first file
1 a
2 b
3 c
4 d
second file
14 a 9 ....
13 b 10....
12 c 11...
11 d 12...
I want to merge the second file to first file that will looks like this
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have tab limited file 1
and tab limited file 2
The output should contain common first column vales and corresponding 2nd column values; AND also unique first column value with corresponding 2nd column value of the file that contains it and 0 for the second file.
the output should... (10 Replies)
I have two files
1.txt
34, ABC, 7, 8, 0.9
35, CDE, 6.5, -2, 0.01
2.txt
34, ABC, 9, 6, -1.9
35, CDE, 8.5, -2.3, 5.01
So in both files common columns are 1 and 2
so final o/p should look like
34, ABC, 7, 8, 0.9, 9, 6, -1.9
35, CDE, 6.5, -2, 0.01, 8.5, -2.3, 5.01
I tried using... (3 Replies)
Hi!
I need to merge two files when col1 (x:x:x) matching and adds second column from file1.txt.
# cat 1.txt
aaa;a12
bbb;b13
ccc;c33
ddd;d55
eee;e11
# cat 2.txt
bbb;b55;34444;d55
aaa;a15;35666;a44
I try with this awk and I get succesfully first column from 1.txt:
# awk -F";"... (2 Replies)
Hello, I have two files that have this format:
file 1
86.82 0.00 86.82 43.61
86.84 0.00 86.84 43.61
86.86 0.00 86.86 43.61
86.88 0.00 86.88 43.61
file 2
86.82 0.22
86.84 0.22
86.86 0.22
86.88 0.22
I would like to merge these two files such that the final file looks like... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file with 16 columns and out of these 16 columns 14 are key columns, 15 th is order column and 16th column is having information. I need to concate the 16th column based on value of 1-14th column as key in order of 15th column. Here are the example file
Input File (multiple... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have two tab delimited text files. Both files have the same number of rows but not necessarily the same number of columns. The column headers look like,
File 1:
f0order CVorder Name f0 RI_9 E99 E199 E299 E399 E499 E599 E699 E799 E899 E999
File 2:... (9 Replies)
Hi, I am trying to selectively merge two files based on keys reported in the 1st column.
File1:
#file1-header1
file1-header2
111 qwe rtz uio
198 asd fgh jkl
165 yxc
789 poi uzt rew
89 lkj
File2:
#file2-header2
file2-header2
165 ghz nko2 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dovah
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
strfmon
STRFMON(3) Linux Programmer's Manual STRFMON(3)NAME
strfmon - convert monetary value to a string
SYNOPSIS
#include <monetary.h>
ssize_t strfmon(char *s, size_t max, const char *format,
...);
DESCRIPTION
The strfmon() function formats the specified amounts according to the format specification format and places the result in the character
array s of size max.
Ordinary characters in format are copied to s without conversion. Conversion specifiers are introduced by a `%' character. Immediately
following it there can be zero or more of the following flags:
=f The single-byte character f is used as the numeric fill character (to be used with a left precision, see below). When not speci-
fied, the space character is used.
^ Do not use any grouping characters that might be defined for the current locale. By default, grouping is enabled.
( or + The ( flag indicates that negative amounts should be enclosed between parentheses. The + flag indicates that signs should be handled
in the default way, that is, amounts are preceded by the locale's sign indication, e.g., nothing for positive, "-" for negative.
! Omit the currency symbol.
- Left justify all fields. The default is right justification.
Next, there may be a field width: a decimal digit string specifying a minimum field width in bytes. The default is 0. A result smaller
than this width is padded with spaces (on the left, unless the left-justify flag was given).
Next, there may be a left precision of the form "#" followed by a decimal digit string. If the number of digits left of the radix character
is smaller than this, the representation is padded on the left with the numeric fill character. Grouping characters are not counted in
this field width.
Next, there may be a right precision of the form "." followed by a decimal digit string. The amount being formatted is rounded to the spec-
ified number of digits prior to formatting. The default is specified in the frac_digits and int_frac_digits items of the current locale.
If the right precision is 0, no radix character is printed. (The radix character here is determined by LC_MONETARY, and may differ from
that specified by LC_NUMERIC.)
Finally, the conversion specification must be ended with a conversion character. The three conversion characters are
% (In this case the entire specification must be exactly "%%".) Put a `%' character in the result string.
i One argument of type double is converted using the locale's international currency format.
n One argument of type double is converted using the locale's national currency format.
RETURN VALUE
The strfmon() function returns the number of characters placed in the array s, not including the terminating NUL character, provided the
string, including the terminating NUL, fits. Otherwise, it sets errno to E2BIG, returns -1, and the contents of the array is undefined.
EXAMPLE
The call
strfmon(buf, sizeof(buf), "[%^=*#6n] [%=*#6i]",
1234.567, 1234.567);
outputs
[ fl **1234,57] [ NLG **1 234,57]
in the Dutch locale (with fl for "florijnen" and NLG for Netherlands Guilders). The grouping character is very ugly because it takes as
much space as a digit, while it should not take more than half that, and will no doubt cause confusion. Surprisingly, the "fl" is preceded
and followed by a space, and "NLG" is preceded by one and followed by two spaces. This may be a bug in the locale files. The Italian, Aus-
tralian, Swiss and Portuguese locales yield
[ L. **1235] [ ITL **1.235]
[ $**1234.57] [ AUD **1,234.57]
[Fr. **1234,57] [CHF **1.234,57]
[ **1234$57Esc] [ **1.234$57PTE ]
SEE ALSO setlocale(3), sprintf(3), locale(7)Linux 2000-12-05 STRFMON(3)