I'm having problems since few days ago, and i'm not able to make it works with a simple awk+grep script (or other way to do this).
For example, i have a input file1.txt:
cat inputfile1.txt
218299910417
1172051195
1172070231
1172073514
1183135117
1183135118
1183135119
1281440202
... (3 Replies)
Hello all,
I want to transpose the rows of a file to the columns (every characters include spaces), i.e.:
input:
abcdefg
123 456
output:
a1
b2
c3
d
e4
f5
g6
I wrote a script:
#!/bin/csh -f (15 Replies)
Dear All,
I am having trouble obtaining the 3 outfiles (as shown below) from a single input file.
Could you please help??
INPUT:
filename
a b c
1 4 2
3 3 2
4 2 7
OUTPUT:
outfile1 (a.dat)
1 (2 Replies)
Hi Team,
Would you please help me for the below scenario.
I want to print the text between "PREF:" AND "AVAIL:" in the below example.
For example:-
TEST_TAF PREF: RAC1 RAC2 RAC3 ...... AVAIL: RAC4
Output will be :-RAC1,RAC2,RAC3.............
Thanks in Advance
Shoan
... (5 Replies)
hey,
i m having a hard time trying to print only the first occurrence between 2 idenicale strings.
for the following output:
please
help
me im a
noob
please
im a noob
help me
noob
please
help
me im a
noob
please
im a noob
help me
noob (3 Replies)
I have a file with class c IP addresses that I need to match to a column and print the matching lines of another file.
I started playing with grep -if file01.out file02.out but I am stuck as to how to match it to a column and print the matching lines;
cat file01.out
10.150.140... (5 Replies)
I cannot seem to get what should be a simple awk one-liner to work correctly and cannot figure out why. I would like to use patterns from a specific field in one file as regex to search for matching strings in the entire line ($0) of another file.
I would like to output the lines of File2 which... (1 Reply)
in the below data i need to search for the word typeMismatch and then traverse back to find the filename of that particular mismatch. Like this we have to get all the file names which has error in them. How can i acheive this.
I tried use sed or awk but not able to achevie the same.
Sample... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ATWC
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
close
close(n) Tcl Built-In Commands close(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
close - Close an open channel
SYNOPSIS
close channelId
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Closes the channel given by channelId.
ChannelId must be an identifier for an open channel such as a Tcl standard channel (stdin, stdout, or stderr), the return value from an
invocation of open or socket, or the result of a channel creation command provided by a Tcl extension.
All buffered output is flushed to the channel's output device, any buffered input is discarded, the underlying file or device is closed,
and channelId becomes unavailable for use.
If the channel is blocking, the command does not return until all output is flushed. If the channel is nonblocking and there is unflushed
output, the channel remains open and the command returns immediately; output will be flushed in the background and the channel will be
closed when all the flushing is complete.
If channelId is a blocking channel for a command pipeline then close waits for the child processes to complete.
If the channel is shared between interpreters, then close makes channelId unavailable in the invoking interpreter but has no other effect
until all of the sharing interpreters have closed the channel. When the last interpreter in which the channel is registered invokes close,
the cleanup actions described above occur. See the interp command for a description of channel sharing.
Channels are automatically closed when an interpreter is destroyed and when the process exits. Channels are switched to blocking mode, to
ensure that all output is correctly flushed before the process exits.
The command returns an empty string, and may generate an error if an error occurs while flushing output. If a command in a command pipe-
line created with open returns an error, close generates an error (similar to the exec command.)
EXAMPLE
This illustrates how you can use Tcl to ensure that files get closed even when errors happen by combining catch, close and return:
proc withOpenFile {filename channelVar script} {
upvar 1 $channelVar chan
set chan [open $filename]
catch {
uplevel 1 $script
} result options
close $chan
return -options $options $result
}
SEE ALSO
file(n), open(n), socket(n), eof(n), Tcl_StandardChannels(3)KEYWORDS
blocking, channel, close, nonblocking
Tcl 7.5 close(n)