Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting [FUN] Numbers to Roman letters/num Post 302928192 by wisecracker on Tuesday 9th of December 2014 04:25:30 PM
Old 12-09-2014
Here you go...

The short basic article as uploaded many years ago...

Bazza...
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to wisecracker For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Letters, Numbers or Alphanumerical

How do I check if a variable consisted of letters, numbers or both letters and numbers? For example, I have a variable $X and I want to print "1" if it contains only letters, "2" if it contains only numbers and "3" if it contains both (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sleepster
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help! scrolling numbers and letters

Hello all I am a unix newbie.... I have a sun netra t1 and it is freaking out I am connected to it through a console port, and it is just spitting out a ton on numbers and letters like below its just keeps going and going. I have tried rebooting it and I cannot get it back to any kind of a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: intraining11
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed command, look for numbers following letters

If I have a set of strings, C21 F231 H42 1C10 1F113 and I want to isolate the ints following the char, what would the sed string be to find numbers after letters? If I do, *, I will get numbers after letters, but I am looking to do something like, sed 's/*/\t*/g' this will give me... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: LMHmedchem
14 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sort roman numerals

If I use ls to print all the files of a folder, is there a way to sort using roman numerals? I am thinking about a result like: benjamin_I.wmv benjamin_II.wmv benjamin_II.wmv benjamin_III.wmv benjamin_IV.wmv benjamin_V.wmv benjamin_VI.wmv benjamin_VII.wmv benjamin_VIII.wmv... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: locoroco
6 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

reducing values in columns with both numbers and letters

Hi, I columns with both number and letters however i need the number 4 trimmed off the lines that have 3 numbers in them so it just because the 2 preceding numbers only For example V25QG2-K18QG-V25CG2 L26HG-L17HA-L26CG I434QD1-L19HB2-I434CD1 I434QD1-A31QB-I434CD1 ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: olifu02
7 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Selective Replacements: Using sed or awk to replace letters with numbers in a very specific way

Hello all. I am a beginner UNIX user who is using UNIX to work on a bioinformatics project for my university. I have a bit of a complicated issue in trying to use sed (or awk) to "find and replace" bases (letters) in a genetics data spreadsheet (converted to a text file, can be either... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mince
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk : match only the pattern string , not letters or numbers after that.

Hi Experts, I am finding difficulty to get exact match: file OPERATING_SYSTEM=HP-UX LOOPBACK_ADDRESS=127.0.0.1 INTERFACE_NAME="lan3" IP_ADDRESS="10.53.52.241" SUBNET_MASK="255.255.255.192" BROADCAST_ADDRESS="" INTERFACE_STATE="" DHCP_ENABLE=0 INTERFACE_NAME="lan3:1"... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rveri
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sorting mixed numbers and letters

Hello, I have a file such as this: chr1 chr2 chr1 chr2 chr3 chr10 chr4 chr5 chrz chr1AI want to sort it, I use this command: sort -k1 -th -n testfilebut I get this output, how can I fix this? chr1 chr1 chr10 chr1A chr2 chr2 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Homa
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sed - extract a group of Letters/numbers

I have a file with hundreds of lines in it. I wanted to extract anything that matches the following: KR followed by 4 digits: example KR1201 cat list | sed "s///g" Is the closest I've come, and obviously it is not what I want. This would remove all of the items that I want and leave me... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Decimal numbers and letters in the same collums: round numbers

Hi! I found and then adapt the code for my pipeline... awk -F"," -vOFS="," '{printf "%0.2f %0.f\n",$2,$4}' xxx > yyy I add -F"," -vOFS="," (for input and output as csv file) and I change the columns and the number of decimal... It works but I have also some problems... here my columns ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: echo manolis
7 Replies
HISTORY(5)							File Formats Manual							HISTORY(5)

NAME
history - record of current and recently expired Usenet articles DESCRIPTION
The file <pathdb in inn.conf>/history keeps a record of all articles currently stored in the news system, as well as those that have been received but since expired. In a typical production environment, this file will be many megabytes. The file consists of text lines. Each line corresponds to one article. The file is normally kept sorted in the order in which articles are received, although this is not a requirement. Innd(8) appends a new line each time it files an article, and expire(8) builds a new version of the file by removing old articles and purging old entries. Each line consists of two or three fields separated by a tab, shown below as : [Hash] date [Hash] date token The Hash field is the ASCII representation of the hash of the Message-ID header. This is directly used for the key of the dbz(3). The date field consists of three sub-fields separated by a tilde. All sub-fields are the text representation of the number of seconds since the epoch -- i.e., a time_t; see gettimeofday(2). The first sub-field is the article's arrival date. If copies of the article are still present then the second sub-field is either the value of the article's Expires header, or a hyphen if no expiration date was speci- fied. If an article has been expired then the second sub-field will be a hyphen. The third sub-field is the value of the article's Date header, recording when the article was posted. The token field is a token of the article. This field is empty if the article has been expired. For example, an article whose Message-ID was <7q2saq$sal$1@isrv4.pa.vix.com>, posted on 26 Aug 1999 08:02:34 GMT and recieved at 26 Aug 1999 08:06:54 GMT, could have a history line (broken into three lines for display) like the following: [E6184A5BC2898A35A3140B149DE91D5C] 935678987~-~935678821 @030154574F00000000000007CE3B000004BA@ In addition to the text file, there is a dbz(3) database associated with the file that uses the Message-ID field as a key to determine the offset in the text file where the associated line begins. For historical reasons, the key includes the trailing byte (which is not stored in the text file). HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. This is revision 1.12.2.1, dated 2000/08/17. SEE ALSO
dbz(3), expire(8), inn.conf(5), innd(8), makehistory(8). HISTORY(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:31 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy