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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find matched patterns and print them with other patterns not the whole line Post 302918627 by redse171 on Wednesday 24th of September 2014 01:12:33 PM
Old 09-24-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by shamrock
This should work albeit untested... awk '{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++) if($i ~ "^(IN|OUT)$") print $3,$i,$(i+1)}' file
Hi shamrock,

It worked as expected. I just need to add OFS="\t" at the end. thanks a lot! Smilie

---------- Post updated at 01:12 PM ---------- Previous update was at 01:11 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by Akshay Hegde
Code:
$ awk  'function p(regex){match($0,regex);return substr($0,RSTART,RLENGTH)}{print p("DSU[0-9]+T[0-9]"),p("(IN|OUT)[[:space:]]+[0-9]")}' file

DSU17281T6 OUT   0
DSU17282T0 OUT   5
DSU17283T0 OUT   0
DSU17284T2 IN   1
DSU16024T3 OUT   1
DSU16025T2 OUT   7
DSU16026T0 IN   3
DSU16027T1 IN   2
DSU16028T0 OUT   2

---------- Post updated at 11:39 PM ---------- Previous update was at 11:34 PM ----------

---

for tab separated fields

Code:
$ awk  'function p(regex){match($0,regex); return substr($0,RSTART,RLENGTH)}{s = p("DSU[0-9]+T[0-9]") FS p("(IN|OUT)[[:space:]]+[0-9]"); gsub(/[[:space:]]+/,OFS,s); print s}' OFS='\t'  file

Hi Akshay Hegde,

It worked perfectly.. Thanks a lot Smilie
 

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TSI(5)                                                          File Formats Manual                                                         TSI(5)

NAME
tsi - Transmission Subscriber Identification (TSI) access control list DESCRIPTION
The HylaFAX configuration parameter QualifyTSI specifies whether or not the identity of a calling facsimile machine should be checked against an access control list before receiving facsimile. If QualifyTSI is non-null, then only messages from facsimile machines identi- fied in the file specified by the string (typically etc/tsi) will be accepted. Patterns are specified one per line and must conform to the regular expressions syntax specified by POSIX 1003.2; see re_format(7). Com- ments may be included; they are introduced with the ``#'' character and extend to the end of the line. Any trailing white space on a line is ignored (for convenience when comments are used). If a line begins with ``!'', then the regular expression identifies clients that should be rejected; otherwise regular expressions identify clients whose transmissions should be accepted. The order of patterns in a TSI file is important. When a facsimile is to be received, the fax server will compare the client's TSI against the patterns in the access control list in the order in which they appear in the file. The first pattern that matches the client TSI is used to decide whether to accept or reject the facsimile. If no patterns match the client TSI then the facsimile is rejected. Thus if you want to accept all but a restricted set of TSI the last line in the file should be ``^.*$''. Note that regular expression patterns should be written to match a TSI exactly. That is, patterns should be of the form: ^<pattern>$ where the ``^'' and ``$'' characters are used to specify the start and end of the matching TSI. Additionally, regular expression patterns should handle white space that may appear in known locations. For example, ^([+]1){1}[ .-]*415[ .-]*555[ .-]*1212.*$ matches the following TSI strings: +1.415.555.1212 415 555 1212 1-415-555-1212 Finally, note that regular expressions can be used to specify many TSI with one pattern. NOTES
It would be nice if TSI that were to be matched against were placed in some canonical form (e.g. remove white space and white space-like characters). This is, however, problematic, because some facsimile machines permit any printable ASCII string to be sent as a TSI. SEE ALSO
faxgetty(8), re_format(7), hylafax-config(5) December 5, 1994 TSI(5)
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