Hi redse171,
I'm very glad that RudiC was able to help you find a solution to your problem. Note that if you need to use split() to correctly group your fields, you don't need to also use match() and substr() to determine whether you have a + or - in field 5 (you can just look directly at seg[5]) after you call split(). You can then simplify your code to something like:
and get the same results.
Hello every one, I have following data
***CAMPAIGN 1998 CONTRIBUTIONS***
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NAME PHONE Jan | Feb | Mar | Total Donated
... (12 Replies)
hi, i have an awk script and I managed to figure out how to search the max value but Im having difficulty in searching for the min field value.
BEGIN {FS=","; max=0}
NF == 7 {if (max < $6) max = $6;}
END { print man, min}
where $6 is the column of a field separated by a comma (3 Replies)
Hi guys!
I'm new to scripting and I need to write a script in awk.
Here is example of file on which I'm working
ATOM 4688 HG1 PRO A 322 18.080 59.680 137.020 1.00 0.00
ATOM 4689 HG2 PRO A 322 18.850 61.220 137.010 1.00 0.00
ATOM 4690 CD ... (18 Replies)
Hi guys,
I already search on the forum but i can't solve this on my own.
I have a lot of files like this:
And i need to print the line with the maximum value in last column but if the value is the same (2 in this exemple for the 3 last lines) i need get the line with the minimum value in... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file which looks like this:
FID IID MISS_PHENO N_MISS N_GENO F_MISS
12AB43131 12AB43131 N 17774 906341 0.01961
65HJ87451 65HJ87451 N 10149 906341 0.0112
43JJ21345 43JJ21345 N 2826 906341 0.003118I would... (11 Replies)
aaa: 3 ms
aaa: 2 ms
aaa: 5 ms
aaa: 10 ms
..........
to get the 3 2 5 10 ...'s min avg and max
something like
min: 2 ms avg: 5 ms max: 10 ms (2 Replies)
I need to find the max/min of columns 1 and 2 of a 2 column file what contains the special character ">".
I know that this will find the max value of column 1.
awk 'BEGIN {max = 0} {if ($1>max) max=$1} END {print max}' input.file
But what if I needed to ignore special characters in the... (3 Replies)
I am trying to get a simple min/max script to work with the below input. Note the special character (">") within it.
Script
awk 'BEGIN{max=0}{if(($1)>max) max=($1)}END {print max}'
awk 'BEGIN{min=0}{if(($2)<min) min=($2)}END {print min}'
Input
-122.2840 42.0009
-119.9950 ... (7 Replies)
LAM(1) BSD General Commands Manual LAM(1)NAME
lam -- laminate files
SYNOPSIS
lam [-f min.max] [-p min.max] [-s sepstring] [-t c] file ...
DESCRIPTION
lam copies the named files side by side onto the standard output. The n-th input lines from the input files are considered fragments of the
single long n-th output line into which they are assembled. The name ``-'' means the standard input, and may be repeated.
Normally, each option affects only the file after it. If the option letter is capitalized it affects all subsequent files until it appears
again uncapitalized. The options are described below.
-f min.max Print line fragments according to the format string min.max, where min is the minimum field width and max the maximum field
width. If min begins with a zero, zeros will be added to make up the field width, and if it begins with a '-', the fragment
will be left-adjusted within the field.
-p min.max Like -f, but pad this file's field when end-of-file is reached and other files are still active.
-s sepstring Print sepstring before printing line fragments from the next file. This option may appear after the last file.
-t c The input line terminator is c instead of a newline. The newline normally appended to each output line is omitted.
To print files simultaneously for easy viewing use pr(1).
EXAMPLES
The command
lam file1 file2 file3 file4
joins 4 files together along each line. To merge the lines from four different files use
lam file1 -S "
" file2 file3 file4
Every 2 lines of a file may be joined on one line with
lam - - < file
and a form letter with substitutions keyed by '@' can be done with
lam -t @ letter changes
SEE ALSO join(1), pr(1), printf(3)BSD December 1, 2001 BSD