apologies, I didn't explain that well. We get multiple B* files from the banks and the names of the actual B* file changes. However one of the B* files now references two accounts/groups in that file. We want to delete the content of the 2nd account of that original file without changing the name of the original file.
we are wanting to delete lines of texts from one of those B* files . but we cant always say its an exact line number. the /^999-999/d seems to work for deleting that whole line any other lines starting with that reference number.
if I run the following manually it looks ok from the unix prompt
Code:
for i in B*
do
sed '/^999-999/d'
done
it seems to work, but I don't know how to save it. I tried the $i after the delete as the name but the file didn't save the removed part.
Last edited by Don Cragun; 07-28-2015 at 11:17 PM..
Reason: Add CODE tags.
Hi gurus,
I have this file with blank lines in it.
How do i remove them in shell?
I tried these commands but not working:
sed '/^ *$/d'
or
sed '/^$/d'
Anybody has a better idea pls?
Also there are lines which starts with a single space, how do we remove the space in those lines?... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a shell script that needs to remove duplicate lines within a file by category.
example:
section a
a
c
b
a
section b
a
b
a
c
I need to remove the duplicates within th category with out removing the duplicates from the 2 different sections (one of the a's in section... (1 Reply)
Hi,
There seems to some hack attempts in my site. I have attached the index page of my site and I need to remove the below lines from the index page. The below lines are at the center of the file.
-->
</style>
<script>E V A L( unescape(... (5 Replies)
hi,,
i hav a file with many lines.i need to remove all lines before a line begginning with a specific pattern from the file because these lines are not required.
Can u help me out with either a perl script or shell script
example:-
if file initially contains lines:
a
b
c
d
.1.2
d
e
f... (2 Replies)
A small question
I have a test.txt file
I have contents as:
a:google
b:yahoo
:
c:facebook
:
d:hotmail
How do I remove the line with :
my output should be
a:google
b:yahoo
c:facebook
d:hotmail (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a huge file which has Lacs of lines. File system got full.
I want your guys help to suggest me a solution so that I can remove all lines from that file but not last 50,000 lines. I want solution which can remove lines from existing file so that I can have some space left with. (28 Replies)
Please Help (novice to PERL and SHELL scripting)…. Need to create a script which removes all lines in $filename = "cycle_calendar_ftp_out" older than current date – a variable which will be a number of days passed to script. For Ex it will look at the end date which is the last field (4) and... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone,
Although it seems easy, I've been stuck with this problem for a moment now and I can't figure out a way to get it done.
My problem is the following:
I have a file where each line is a sequence of IP addresses, example :
10.0.0.1 10.0.0.2
10.0.0.5 10.0.0.1 10.0.0.2... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I have a SAS code that predominantly has comments line and the real code like below and i want to remove ONLY THE COMMENTS from the code in the single line or spanned across multiple lines.
/********************************************************************
*** This Is a Comment... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: arooonatr
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
shtool-subst
SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1) GNU Portable Shell Tool SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1)NAME
shtool-subst - GNU shtool sed(1) substitution operations
SYNOPSIS
shtool subst [-v|--verbose] [-t|--trace] [-n|--nop] [-w|--warning] [-q|--quiet] [-s|--stealth] [-i|--interactive] [-b|--backup ext]
[-e|--exec cmd] [-f|--file cmd-file] [file] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
This command applies one or more sed(1) substitution operations to stdin or any number of files.
OPTIONS
The following command line options are available.
-v, --verbose
Display some processing information.
-t, --trace
Enable the output of the essential shell commands which are executed.
-n, --nop
No operation mode. Actual execution of the essential shell commands which would be executed is suppressed.
-w, --warning
Show warning on substitution operation resulting in no content change on every file. The default is to show a warning on substitution
operations resulted in no content change on all files.
-q, --quiet
Suppress warning on substitution operation resulting in no content change.
-s, --stealth
Stealth operation. Preserve timestamp on file.
-i, --interactive
Enter interactive mode where the user has to approve each operation.
-b, --backup ext
Preserve backup of original file using file name extension ext. Default is to overwrite the original file.
-e, --exec cmd
Specify sed(1) command directly.
-f, --file cmd-file
Read sed(1) command from file.
EXAMPLE
# shell script
shtool subst -i -e 's;(c) ([0-9]*)-2000;(c) 1-2001;' *.[ch]
# RPM spec-file
%install
shtool subst -v -n
-e 's;^(prefix=).*;1 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{_prefix};g'
-e 's;^(sysconfdir=).*;1 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{_prefix}/etc;g'
`find . -name Makefile -print`
make install
HISTORY
The GNU shtool subst command was originally written by Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com> in 2001 for GNU shtool. It was prompted
by the need to have a uniform and convenient patching frontend to sed(1) operations in the OpenPKG package specifications.
SEE ALSO shtool(1), sed(1).
18-Jul-2008 shtool 2.0.8 SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1)