Or (if your input files really do have the same base name and have literal 1 and 2 at the ends of their names) in any shell that is based on Bourne shell syntax:
Hi All,
I have two comma separated value(CSV) files, say FileA and FileB.
The contents looks like that shown below.
FileA
EmpNo,Name,Age,Sex,
1000,ABC,23,M,
1001,DES,24,F, ... (2 Replies)
Hello I am trying to append an incrimenting number to the end of each line I have it working with a temp file. But I want to do this without a temp file.
a=1
cat "file" | while read LINE
do
echo "$LINE, $a" >> filewithnumbers
a=`expr $a + 1`
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I want to add \n as a EOF at the end of file if it does't exist in a single command. How to do this?
when I use command
echo "1\n" > a.txt
and
od -c a.txt
0000000 1 \n \n
0000003
How does it differentiate \n and eof in this case?
Regards,
Venkat (1 Reply)
Hello All,
this is my first post so I don't know if I am doing this right.
I would like to append entries from a series of strings (contained in a text file) consecutively at the end of specifically labeled lines in another file.
As an example:
- the file that contains the values to be... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a files in a directory as below :-
ls -1
mqdepth-S1STC02
proc-mq-S1STC01
proc-mq-S1STC02
proc-mq-S1STC03
Whereever i have S1STC i need to copy them into new file with file name S2STC.
expected output :-
ls -1
mqdepth-S2STC02
proc-mq-S2STC01
proc-mq-S2STC02... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a log file (log.txt) that which contains lines of date/time.
I need to create a script to extract a CSV file (out.csv) that gets all the sequential times (with only 1 minute difference) together by stating the start time and end time of this period.
Sample log file (log.txt)
... (7 Replies)
Trying to process 1000 or so files. Take original date and append to end of file. Like so:
tstpls42.bas
tstpls42.bas.Sep-11--2011
Been working along these lines:
date=`ll tstpls42.bas |cut -c 46-57 |sed -e 's/]/\-/g' | grep -v '^$'`
for i in *.bas ; do j=`ll $i /hpdump/b1 | awk... (1 Reply)
Hi ,
Please help me out for the below problem -
I have 2 files in a directory -
$ ls -ltr
total 4
-rwx------+ 1 abc Domain Users 615 May 31 17:33 abc.txt
-rwx------+ 1 abc Domain Users 0 May 31 17:33 ll.sh
I want to write the filename of abc.txt along with the directory to the... (2 Replies)
I have a log file which have a date and time at the start of every line.
I need to search the log file starting from a specific time to the end of file.
For example:
Starting point: July 29 2018 21:00:00
End point : end of file
My concern is what if the pattern of `July 29 2018 21:00:00`... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: erin00
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
cat
cat(1) General Commands Manual cat(1)Name
cat - concatenate and print data
Syntax
cat [ -b ] [ -e ] [ -n ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -u ] [ -v ] file...
Description
The command reads each file in sequence and displays it on the standard output. Therefore, to display the file on the standard output you
type:
cat file
To concatenate two files and place the result on the third you type:
cat file1 file2 > file3
To concatenate two files and append them to a third you type:
cat file1 file2 >> file3
If no input file is given, or if a minus sign (-) is encountered as an argument, reads from the standard input file. Output is buffered in
1024-byte blocks unless the standard output is a terminal, in which case it is line buffered. The utility supports the processing of 8-bit
characters.
Options-b Ignores blank lines and precedes each output line with its line number.
-e Displays a dollar sign ($) at the end of each output line.
-n Precedes all output lines (including blank lines) with line numbers.
-s Squeezes adjacent blank lines from output and single spaces output.
-t Displays non-printing characters (including tabs) in output. In addition to those representations used with the -v option, all tab
characters are displayed as ^I.
-u Unbuffers output.
-v Displays non-printing characters (excluding tabs and newline) as the ^x. If the character is in the range octal 0177 to octal 0241,
it is displayed as M-x. The delete character (octal 0177) displays as ^?. For example, is displayed as ^X.
See Alsocp(1), ex(1), more(1), pr(1), tail(1)cat(1)