Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Grouping and Subgrouping using awk Post 302953799 by RudiC on Tuesday 1st of September 2015 02:49:01 PM
Old 09-01-2015
@Scrutinizer: brilliant and terse; works well if the first epoch time in a group is an integer multiple of 3600 but shifts the entire range output if the time has some additional seconds in it.

@hemanty4u: With the data as given, t is calculated by successive addition of 1, i.e. 400277 loops, while one single division yields the same result. And, in the END section, you print 400283 times your output line. No surprise run time is that long! Try for (a in A) print a, A[a] in the END section.

Last edited by RudiC; 09-02-2015 at 04:26 AM..
This User Gave Thanks to RudiC For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

egrep and grouping

i am using the c shell on solaris. directories i'm working with: ls -1d DIV* DIV_dental/ DIV_ibc/ DIV_ifc/ DIV_index/ DIV_pharm/ DIV_sectionI/ DIV_sectionI-title/ DIV_sectionI-toc/ DIV_sectionII-title/ DIV_sectionII-toc/ DIV_standing/ DIV_standing-toc/ DIV_title/ DIV_vision/ (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: effigy
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grouping using sed/awk ?

I run awk cat $1|awk '{print $6}' and get a lot of results and I want results to group them. For example my result is (o/p is unknown to user) xyz xyz abc pqr xyz pqr etc I wanna group them as xyz=total found 7 abc=total .... pqr= Thank (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pujansrt
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk grouping by name script

Hello I am trying to figure out a script which could group a log file by user names. I worked with awk command and I could trim the log file to: <USER: John Frisbie > /* Thu Aug 06 2009 15:11:45.7974 */ FLOAT GRANT WRITE John Frisbie (500 of 3005 write) <USER: Shawn Sanders > /* Thu Aug 06... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Avto
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK script to create max value of 3rd column, grouping by first column

Hi, I need an awk script (or whatever shell-construct) that would take data like below and get the max value of 3 column, when grouping by the 1st column. clientname,day-of-month,max-users ----------------------------------- client1,20120610,5 client2,20120610,2 client3,20120610,7... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ckmehta
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk and perl grouping.

Hello folks. After awk, i have decided to start to learn perl, and i need some help. I have following output : 1 a 1 b 2 k 2 f 3 s 3 p Now with awk i get desired output by issuing : awk ' { a = a FS $2 } END { for ( i in a) print i,a }' input 1 a b 2 k f 3 s p Can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Peasant
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

grouping using sed or awk

I have below inside a file. 11.22.33.44 user1 11.22.33.55 user2 I need this manipulated as alias server1.domain.com='ssh user1@11.22.33.44' alias server2.domain.com='ssh user2@11.22.33.55' (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anil510
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grouping

Hi all, I am using following command: perl program.pl input.txt output.txt CUTOFF 3 > groups_3.txt containing program.pl, two files (input.txt, output.txt) and getting output in groups_3.txt: But, I wish to have 30 files corresponding to each CUTOFF ranging from 0 to 30 using the same... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bioinfo
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

awk Grouping and Subgrouping with Counts

So I have a ton of files, lines in excess of 3 MIL per file. I need to find a solution to find the top 3 products, and then get the top 5 skews with a count of how many times that skew was viewed. This is a sample file, shortened it for readability. Each ROW is counted as view. Here's the... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: JoshCrosby
10 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Name grouping

awk 'FNR==NR {a; next} $NF in a' genes.txt refseq_exons.txt > output.txt I can not figure out how to group the same name in $4 together. Basically, all the SKI together in separate rows and all the TGFB2. Thank you :). chr1 2160133 2161174 SKI chr1 218518675 218520389 TGFB2... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with grouping and zipping

Hi can you please help with the below ? source file: Column1,Column2,Column3,Column4 abc,123,dir1/FXX/F19,1 abc,123,dir1/FXX/F20,1 abc,123,dir1/FXX/F23,2 abc,123,dir1/FXX/C25,2 abc,123,dir1/FXX/X25,2 abc,123,dir1/FXX/A23,3 abc,123,dir1/FXX/Z25,3 abc,123,dir1/FXX/Y25,4 I want to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: paul1234
3 Replies
time(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   time(1)

Name
       time - time a command

Syntax
       time command
       /bin/time command

Description
       The  command  lets  the specified command execute and then outputs the amount of elapsed real time, the time spent in the operating system,
       and the time spent in execution of the command.	Times are reported in seconds and are written to standard error.

       If you are using any shell except the C shell, you can give the command as shown on the first line of the Syntax section.  If you are using
       the  C shell, you must use the command's full pathname as shown on the second line of the Syntax section.  If you do not use the full path-
       name, will execute its own built-in command that supplies additional information and uses a different output format.

       The command can be used to cause a command to be timed no matter how much CPU time it takes.  For example:
       % /bin/time cp /etc/rc /usr/bill/rc
	       0.1 real 	0.0 user	 0.0 sys
       % /bin/time nroff sample1 > sample1.nroff
	       3.6 real 	2.4 user	 1.2 sys
       This example indicates that the command used negligible amounts of user and system time and had an elapsed time of 1/10 second (0.1).   The
       command used 2.4 seconds of user time and 1.2 seconds of system time, and required 3.6 seconds of elapsed time.

Restrictions
       Times are measured to an accuracy of 1/10 second.  Thus, the sum of the user and system times can be larger than the elapsed time.

See Also
       csh(1)

																	   time(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:05 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy