10-13-2014
Post the output of cat -vet text on your input file here...
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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
using c-shell, does anyone know how to send control characters to the printer before the job?
I need to set a printer to print in condensed mode
HELP (1 Reply)
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2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
how can i get rid of the control characters , ex. ^M, ^G, in a file?
thanks... (2 Replies)
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Hi,
When I do a man and save it into a file, I end up getting a lot of control characters. How can I remove them??
I tried this:
/1,$ s/^H//g
But I get an error saying "no previous regular expression".
Can someone help me with this.
Thanks,
Aravind (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aravind_mg
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi ,
I have special character control M in many of my files as below
ersNet-Telnet-3.03/Makefile.PL100644 21166 144 612 7113770214 135
77 0ustar jayusers## -*- Perl -*-^M
^M
use ExtUtils::MakeMaker qw(WriteMakefile);^M
^M
WriteMakefile(NAME => "Net::Telnet",^M
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Hi,
Can anyone help me with controlling the cursor position from a shell script. Things like moving left,right,up,down etc
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Can somebody please help me with the query. ?
I want a part of program of which should look for control characters in the flat file , when it finds it, displaying message that Control Characters found..!
Please help me (1 Reply)
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Can somebody please help me with the query. ?
I want a part of program of which should look for control characters in the flat file , when it finds it, displaying message that Control Characters found..!
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sed -e "s// /g" old.txt > new.txt
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9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
My files are showing some control characters in vi editor
^M
^@ and somtimes
^H
I removed ^M with %s/^M//g command
but how to represent ^@ and ^H
e.g. for ^M it is hold ctrl then v and m..
Please help..
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Hallo Team,
I am trying to get rid of the dollar sign. I managed to remove all the other special characters but i am struggling with this one.
-bash-3.2$ cat -e missing_revenue_20141112.csv|less|head
BW0522168531211141180935668@196.23.110.141$
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CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)
NAME
cat - catenate and print
SYNOPSIS
cat [ -u ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -v ] file ...
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
displays the file on the standard output, and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no input file is given, or if the argument `-' is encountered, cat reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in the block
size recommended by stat(2) unless the standard output is a terminal, when it is line buffered. The -u option makes the output completely
unbuffered.
The -n option displays the output lines preceded by lines numbers, numbered sequentially from 1. Specifying the -b option with the -n
option omits the line numbers from blank lines.
The -s option crushes out multiple adjacent empty lines so that the output is displayed single spaced.
The -v option displays non-printing characters so that they are visible. Control characters print like ^X for control-x; the delete char-
acter (octal 0177) prints as ^?. Non-ascii characters (with the high bit set) are printed as M- (for meta) followed by the character of
the low 7 bits. A -e option may be given with the -v option, which displays a `$' character at the end of each line. Specifying the -t
option with the -v option displays tab characters as ^I.
SEE ALSO
cp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)
BUGS
Beware of `cat a b >a' and `cat a b >b', which destroy the input files before reading them.
4th Berkeley Distribution May 5, 1986 CAT(1)