Does anyone know how to get these two output lines into one colon ':' separated line with some unix command? Maybe nawk. I've tried to read the nawk and awk man pages but I don't get it right. Are these commands the one to use?
Output from find command:
#
/sw/tools/matlab/7.0.1/man... (2 Replies)
How do I deal with extracting a portion of a record when multiple field separators are involved.
Let's say I have:
Mike Harrington;(555) 555-5555:250:100:175
Christian Dobbins;(555) 555-2358:155:90:201
Susan Dalsass;(555) 555-6279:250:60:50
Archie McNichol;(555) 555-1348:250:100:175
Jody... (3 Replies)
OS=HP-UX ksh
The following works, except I want to include the <start> and <end> in the output.
awk -F '<start>' 'BEGIN{RS="<end>"; OFS="\n"; ORS=""} {print $2} somefile.log'
The following work in bash but not in ksh
sed -n '/^<start>/,/^<end>/{/LABEL$/!p}' somefile.log (4 Replies)
Hi,
Is there a way in Korn Shell that I can run multiple commands stored as a semi-colon separated string, e.g.,
# vs="echo a; echo b;"
# $vs
a; echo b;
I want to be able to store commands in a variable, then run all of it once and pipe the whole output to another program without using... (2 Replies)
I'm using AIX 5.3 and running a awk replace to modify data as follows:
echo 1234: 1234 123 123 444 555 666 7777 | awk '/^:/{split($2,N);n=N} {n=$1} {sub(n,n+10000000)}1'
10001234 1234 123 123 444 555 666 7777
dumb question.. how do I get the colon back in, so it outputs
10001234: 1234... (4 Replies)
Experts, how to sort this fields with numerical order :
-How to use the sort command in this case, I was thinking with -k but it is not working,
lan5000
lan5000:1
lan5000:10
lan5000:11
lan5000:12
lan5000:13
lan5000:14
lan5000:15
lan5000:16
lan5000:17 ... (6 Replies)
Hi experts ,
I am trying to get the below output:
file :
0/6/4/1 0x0019503C2E26 5 UP lan5 snap5 1 ETHER Yes 224
0/6/4/0 0x0019503C2E25 6 UP lan6 snap6 2 ETHER Yes 224
0/2/1/0 0x0019503E6900 0 UP lan0 snap0 3 ETHER Yes 224... (8 Replies)
After some thought.
I am uncomfortable issuing my professors name where, there may be unintended side effects from any negative responses/feedback. Willing to re post if I can omit school / professor publicly, but can message moderator for validation? I am here for knowledge and understanding,... (1 Reply)
I am using awk to search $5 of the "input" file using the "list" file as the search criteria. So if the id in line 1 of "list" is found in "search" then it is counted in the ids found. However, if the line in "list" is not found in "search", then it is outputted as is missing. The awk below runs... (3 Replies)
Trying to get the unique count of the below input, but if the text in beginning of $5 is a partial match to another line in the file then it is not unique.
awk
awk '!seen++ {n++} END {print n}' input
7 input
chr1 159174749 159174770 chr1:159174749-159174770 ACKR1
chr1 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
total
TOTAL(1) General Commands Manual TOTAL(1)NAME
total - sum up columns
SYNOPSIS
total [ -m ][ -sE | -p | -u | -l ][ -i{f|d}[N] ][ -o{f|d} ][ -tC ][ -N [ -r ]] [ file .. ]
DESCRIPTION
Total sums up columns of real numbers from one or more files and prints out the result on its standard output.
By default, total computes the straigt sum of each input column, but multiplication can be specified instead with the -p option. Likewise,
the -u option means find the upper limit (maximum), and -l means find the lower limit (minimum).
Sums of powers can be computed by giving an exponent with the -s option. (Note that there is no space between the -s and the exponent.)
This exponent can be any real number, positive or negative. The absolute value of the input is always taken before the power is computed
in order to avoid complex results. Thus, -s1 will produce a sum of absolute values. The default power (zero) is interpreted as a straight
sum without taking absolute values.
The -m option can be used to compute the mean rather than the total. For sums, the arithmetic mean is computed. For products, the geomet-
ric mean is computed. (A logarithmic sum of absolute values is used to avoid overflow, and zero values are silently ignored.)
If the input data is binary, the -id or -if option may be given for 64-bit double or 32-bit float values, respectively. Either option may
be followed immediately by an optional count, which defaults to 1, indicating the number of double or float binary values to read per
record on the input file. (There can be no space between the option and this count.) Similarly, the -od and -of options specify binary
double or float output, respectively. These options do not need a count, as this will be determined by the number of input channels.
A count can be given as the number of lines to read before computing a result. Normally, total reads each file to its end before producing
its result, but this behavior may be overridden by inserting blank lines in the input. For each blank input line, total produces a result
as if the end-of-file had been reached. If two blank lines immediately follow each other, total closes the file and proceeds to the next
one (after reporting the result). The -N option (where N is a decimal integer) tells total to produce a result and reset the calculation
after every N input lines. In addition, the -r option can be specified to override reinitialization and thus give a running total every N
lines (or every blank line). If the end of file is reached, the current total is printed and the calculation is reset before the next file
(with or without the -r option).
The -tC option can be used to specify the input and output tab character. The default tab character is TAB.
If no files are given, the standard input is read.
EXAMPLE
To compute the RMS value of colon-separated columns in a file:
total -t: -m -s2 input
To produce a running product of values from a file:
total -p -1 -r input
BUGS
If the input files have varying numbers of columns, mean values will certainly be off. Total will ignore missing column entries if the tab
separator is a non-white character, but cannot tell where a missing column should have been if the tab character is white.
AUTHOR
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO cnt(1), neaten(1), rcalc(1), rlam(1), tabfunc(1)RADIANCE 2/3/95 TOTAL(1)