We are getting extended Ascii characters in the input file and my requirement is to search and replace them with a space. I am using the following command
It is doing a good job, but in some cases it is replacing the extended characters with two spaces. So my input file is fixed length file and because of this the length is increasing by 1 character or 2 characters depending on number of extended characters in the single line.
What is the best way to replace extended characters with only one space ?
(preferably sed command)
Greetings....
I'm looking for the command and syntax to search files, several actually, that will find the string pattern "\0;" and delete it. I have over 200 files to change :o
Thanx (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like to change the extended ascii code ( 128 - 255).
I tried to change LC_ALL and LANG in current session ( values from locale -a) and for no good.
Thanks. (0 Replies)
Hi All,
In the HP Unix that i'm using when i initialise a string as Stalled="'30¬G'"
Stalled=$Stalled" '30¬C'", it is taking the character ¬ as a comma. I need to grep for 30¬G 30¬C in a file and take its count. But since this character ¬ is not being understood, the count returns a zero.
The... (2 Replies)
hi i would like to check text files if they contain extended ascii characters within or not. i really dont have any idea how to start your kind help would be very much appreciated thanks. (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm trying to send extended ascii characters to my HP2055 as part of PCL printer control codes. What I want to do is select a bar code font, print the bar code and reset the printer to the default font.
Selecting the bar code font works good. Printing the bar code goes almost ok too. ... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Is there a way to identify the lines in a file having extended ascii characters and display the same?
For instance I have a file abc.txt having below data
aaa|bbb|111|This is first line
aaa|bbb|222|This is secõnd line
aaa|bbb|333|This is third line
aaa|bbb|444|This is foùrth line... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to read extended ASCII characters from keyboard using c language on unix/linux. How to read extended characters from keyboard or by copy-paste in terminal irrespective of locale set in the system. I want to read the input characters from keyboard, store it in an array or some local... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to remove (SELECTIVE - passed as argument) Extended ASCII using Awk based on adhoc basis. Can you please let me know how to do it. I have to implement this using awk only.
Thanks & Regads (14 Replies)
I am working with a log file that I am trying to clean up by removing non-English ASCII characters. I am using Bash via Cygwin on Windows.
Before I start I set:
export LC_ALL=C
I clean it up by removing all non-English ASCII characters with the following command;
grep -v $''... (4 Replies)
I am trying to develop a script which will work on a source UTF-8 file and perform one or more of the following
It will accept the target encoding as an argument e.g. US-ASCII or ISO-8859-1, etc
1. It should replace all occurrences of characters outside target character set by " " (space) or... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hemkiran.s
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
tr
tr(1) General Commands Manual tr(1)Name
tr - translate characters
Syntax
tr [-cds] [string1[string2]]
Description
The command copies the standard input to the standard output with substitution or deletion of selected characters. Input characters found
in string1 are mapped into the corresponding characters of string2. When string2 is short it is padded to the length of string1 by dupli-
cating its last character. Any combination of the options -cds may be used: -c complements the set of characters in string1 with respect
to the universe of characters whose ASCII codes are 0 through 0377 octal; -d deletes all input characters in string1; -s squeezes all
strings of repeated output characters that are in string2 to single characters.
In either string the notation a-b means a range of characters from a to b in increasing ASCII order. The backslash character () followed
by 1, 2 or 3 octal digits stands for the character whose ASCII code is given by those digits. A followed by any other character stands
for that character.
The following example creates a list of all the words in `file1' one per line in `file2', where a word is taken to be a maximal string of
alphabetics. The second string is quoted to protect from the Shell. 012 is the ASCII code for newline.
tr -cs A-Za-z '