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Full Discussion: Split columns into rows
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Split columns into rows Post 302969804 by Akshay Hegde on Monday 28th of March 2016 08:33:30 AM
Old 03-28-2016
Ok, try this

Code:
[akshay@localhost tmp]$ cat f
10000|latDate:1442457679000|lat:-99|co1|c2
10001|latDate:1448538549000|lat:3213374
10002|latDate:144558585|lat:34848006
10004|latDate:1442455248000|lat:35872402070386
10005|latDate:35193106096435

[akshay@localhost tmp]$ grep -oP 'lat:[-+]?\w+' f
lat:-99
lat:3213374
lat:34848006
lat:35872402070386

---------- Post updated at 07:03 PM ---------- Previous update was at 06:59 PM ----------

Code:
lat:[-+]?\w+

lat: matches the characters lat: literally (case sensitive)
[-+]? match a single character present in the list below
Quantifier: ? Between zero and one time, as many times as possible
\w+ match any word character [a-zA-Z0-9_]
 

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WMSUN(1)						      General Commands Manual							  WMSUN(1)

NAME
WMSUN - Dockable WindowMaker SunRise/SunSet App SYNOPSIS
wmSun [-h] [-display <Display>] [-lat <Latitude>] [-lon <Longitude>] [-td <TimeDiff>] [-date <yyyymmdd>] DESCRIPTION
wmSun displays the current day's Sun Rise and Set Times. You must enter your LAtitude and Longitude correctly for it to work. OPTIONS
-h Display list of command-line options. -display <display> Use an alternate X Display. -lat <Latitude> Set latitude of observer. -lon <Longitude> Set longitude of observer. -td <UT - LT> Set the difference beteeen UT and LT. Useful when you want to show the Sunrise/Sunset at a remote lat/lon without resetting your clock. -date <yyyymmdd> Set the date to show sunrise/sunset for. EXAMPLES
wmSun -lon 106.3 -lat 35.9 this would display rise/set times at Los Alamos in local time. wmSun -lat 19.58 -lon 155.92 -td 10 this would display rise/set times in Kona, Hawaii in local time (in winter -- you need to take into account daylight savings at other times of the year). BUGS
Who knows? (Let me know if you find any). AUTHOR
Michael G. Henderson <mghenderson@lanl.gov> 5 January 1999 WMSUN(1)
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