hi
i have a line
"abc,def,ghi,abc,def ,ghi,abc,def,ghi,abc,def ,ghi,abc,def,ghi,abc"
I want to print the no of words, words separated by comma
please help (3 Replies)
Hi, im having a problem with xargs, i want to cout word of each line in file, and i HAVE to use xargs, i tried:
cat file | xargs wc -w .....that uses all words in file like name of files and passed then to wc so it worte wc :somewordformfile is not i afile or directory
cat file | xargs -I{} wc... (3 Replies)
Hi
Im looking for a way, hopefully a one-liner to sort words in a line
e.g
"these are the words in a line"
to
"a are in line the these words"
Thanks! (15 Replies)
I have a file which will have rows like shown below,
ST*820*316054716
RMR*IV*11333331009*PO*40.31
REF*IV*22234441009*xsss471-2762
DTM*003*091016
ENT*000006
RMR*IV*2222234444*PO*239.91
REF*IV*1234445451009*LJhjlkhkj471-2762 </SPAN>
DTM*003*
091016
RMR*IV*2223344441009*PO*40.31... (18 Replies)
Hi Guys, :p
I have a file like this:
2010-04-25 00:00:30,095 INFO - ]- start process U100M4
2010-04-25 00:00:30,096 DEBUG - ] -- call EJB
2010-04-25 00:00:30,709 INFO - - end processU100M4
2010-04-25 00:00:30,710 DEBUG - got message=Sorry
I want to out put format.
2010-04-25... (5 Replies)
Gurus,
I have a file containing lines like this :
Now, number of words in each line varies. My need is, if a word repeats in a line get it printed. Also total number of repeats.
So, the output would be :
Any help would be highly appreciated.
Thanks & Regards (5 Replies)
I would like to cut words based on the word count of a line. This over here inspired me with some ideas but I wasn't able to get what I needed.
https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/105841-count-words-each-line-file-using-xargs.html
If the line has 6 words I would like to use this.... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I am looking to automate a task - which is updating an existing access control instruction of a server and making sure that the attributes defined in the instruction is in sorted order. The instructions will be of a specific syntax.
For example lets assume below listed is one of an... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I need one help to replace particular words in file based on if finds another words in that file .
i.e.
my self is peter@king.
i am staying at north sydney.
we all are peter@king.
How to replace peter to sham if it finds @king in any line of that file.
Please help me... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rajib Podder
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
spell
SPELL(1) General Commands Manual SPELL(1)NAME
spell, spellin, spellout - find spelling errors
SYNOPSIS
spell [ option ] ... [ file ] ...
/usr/src/cmd/spell/spellin [ list ]
/usr/src/cmd/spell/spellout [ -d ] list
DESCRIPTION
Spell collects words from the named documents, and looks them up in a spelling list. Words that neither occur among nor are derivable (by
applying certain inflections, prefixes or suffixes) from words in the spelling list are printed on the standard output. If no files are
named, words are collected from the standard input.
Spell ignores most troff, tbl and eqn(1) constructions.
Under the -v option, all words not literally in the spelling list are printed, and plausible derivations from spelling list words are indi-
cated.
Under the -b option, British spelling is checked. Besides preferring centre, colour, speciality, travelled, etc., this option insists upon
-ise in words like standardise, Fowler and the OED to the contrary notwithstanding.
Under the -x option, every plausible stem is printed with `=' for each word.
The spelling list is based on many sources, and while more haphazard than an ordinary dictionary, is also more effective in respect to
proper names and popular technical words. Coverage of the specialized vocabularies of biology, medicine and chemistry is light.
Pertinent auxiliary files may be specified by name arguments, indicated below with their default settings. Copies of all output are accu-
mulated in the history file. The stop list filters out misspellings (e.g. thier=thy-y+ier) that would otherwise pass.
Two routines help maintain the hash lists used by spell. Both expect a list of words, one per line, from the standard input. Spellin adds
the words on the standard input to the preexisting list and places a new list on the standard output. If no list is specified, the new
list is created from scratch. Spellout looks up each word in the standard input and prints on the standard output those that are missing
from (or present on, with option -d) the hash list.
FILES
D=/usr/dict/hlist[ab]: hashed spelling lists, American & British
S=/usr/dict/hstop: hashed stop list
H=/usr/dict/spellhist: history file
/usr/lib/spell
deroff(1), sort(1), tee(1), sed(1)BUGS
The spelling list's coverage is uneven; new installations will probably wish to monitor the output for several months to gather local addi-
tions.
British spelling was done by an American.
SPELL(1)