I am not sure how you have tried running command with other files, but please make sure about command like first file should have 3 fields and 2nd passed file should have 2 fields etc to give you the requested output.
Like in following example.
Where file2 has 3 fields and file1 has 2 fields. Let me know if you have any queries and post the error with complete input please incase you have queries, will try to fix the same.
Thanks,
R. Singh
This User Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
Hi,
This is my input file:
ali 5 usa abc
abu 4 uk bca
alan 6 brazil bac
pinky 10 utah sdc
My desired output:
pinky 10 utah sdc
alan 6 brazil bac
ali 5 usa abc
abu 4 uk bca
Based on the column two, I want to do the descending order and print out other related column at the... (3 Replies)
Hi. How do I find an expression with awk in only one column, and if it fits, then print that whole column.
1 apple oranges
2 bannanas pears
3 cats dogs
4 hesaid shesaid
echo "which number:"
read NUMBER (user inputs number 2 for this example)
awk " /$NUMBER/ {field to search is field... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I am running on AIX.I have a question about sorting in UNIX.
if my file is something like this:
a c
b d
a b
b c
a a
I want to sort on column 1 only. The following statement does not seem to work, it still considers the rest of the line in the sorting results: sort... (2 Replies)
I have a file like:
I would like to find lines lines with duplicate values in column 1, and retain only one based on two conditions: 1) keep line with highest value in column 3, 2) if column 3 values are equal, retain the line with the highest value in column 4.
Desired output:
I was able to... (3 Replies)
How to sort based on the 4 the column . The input data has a header and output needs to be sorted based on the 4th column rbcid.
I tried below code but not getting results
sort -u -t'|' -k4,4r file1 > file2
time|tourit|nofdays|rbcid|blank|type|value|nill|valuedesc|name... (6 Replies)
Hello all,
How do I achieve this? I have A, B and A/B in different variables in a file in col2.
I want them to sort in such a way, that the variables appear together, and within a variable, the data is sorted in the order A,B and then A/B. If I sort on the second column, the order becomes A,... (6 Replies)
Need your support for below. Please help to get required output
If column 5 is INV then only consider column1 and take out duplicates/identical rows/values from column1 and then put minimum value of column6 in column7 and put maximum value in column 8 and then need to do subtract values of... (7 Replies)
How to sort the following output based on lowest to highest BE?
The following sort does not work.
$ sort -t. -k1,1n -k2,2n bfd.txt
BE31.116 0s 0s DOWN DAMP
BE31.116 0s 0s DOWN DAMP
BE31.117 0s 0s ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: sand1234
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
join
JOIN(1) BSD General Commands Manual JOIN(1)NAME
join -- relational database operator
SYNOPSIS
join [-a file_number | -v file_number] [-e string] [-o list] [-t char] [-1 field] [-2 field] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
The join utility performs an ``equality join'' on the specified files and writes the result to the standard output. The ``join field'' is
the field in each file by which the files are compared. The first field in each line is used by default. There is one line in the output
for each pair of lines in file1 and file2 which have identical join fields. Each output line consists of the join field, the remaining
fields from file1 and then the remaining fields from file2.
The default field separators are tab and space characters. In this case, multiple tabs and spaces count as a single field separator, and
leading tabs and spaces are ignored. The default output field separator is a single space character.
Many of the options use file and field numbers. Both file numbers and field numbers are 1 based, i.e., the first file on the command line is
file number 1 and the first field is field number 1. The following options are available:
-a file_number
In addition to the default output, produce a line for each unpairable line in file file_number.
-e string
Replace empty output fields with string.
-o list
The -o option specifies the fields that will be output from each file for each line with matching join fields. Each element of list
has either the form file_number.field, where file_number is a file number and field is a field number, or the form '0' (zero), repre-
senting the join field. The elements of list must be either comma (',') or whitespace separated. (The latter requires quoting to
protect it from the shell, or, a simpler approach is to use multiple -o options.)
-t char
Use character char as a field delimiter for both input and output. Every occurrence of char in a line is significant.
-v file_number
Do not display the default output, but display a line for each unpairable line in file file_number. The options -v 1 and -v 2 may be
specified at the same time.
-1 field
Join on the field'th field of file1.
-2 field
Join on the field'th field of file2.
When the default field delimiter characters are used, the files to be joined should be ordered in the collating sequence of sort(1), using
the -b option, on the fields on which they are to be joined, otherwise join may not report all field matches. When the field delimiter char-
acters are specified by the -t option, the collating sequence should be the same as sort(1) without the -b option.
If one of the arguments file1 or file2 is '-', the standard input is used.
EXIT STATUS
The join utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
COMPATIBILITY
For compatibility with historic versions of join, the following options are available:
-a In addition to the default output, produce a line for each unpairable line in both file1 and file2.
-j1 field
Join on the field'th field of file1.
-j2 field
Join on the field'th field of file2.
-j field
Join on the field'th field of both file1 and file2.
-o list ...
Historical implementations of join permitted multiple arguments to the -o option. These arguments were of the form
file_number.field_number as described for the current -o option. This has obvious difficulties in the presence of files named 1.2.
These options are available only so historic shell scripts do not require modification and should not be used.
SEE ALSO awk(1), comm(1), paste(1), sort(1), uniq(1)STANDARDS
The join command conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').
BSD July 5, 2004 BSD