In the secondary output:
where do these numbers come from?
If you're counting the number of times a digit appears in the input, 0 occurs 13 times (not 12 times) in your sample input. If you're counting the number of times a value appears in your sample input, 0 (or 00) does not appear at all???
All of your input values are two digit strings. Are we supposed to treat 01 and 1 as the same value or as distinct values? If they are the same, is 010 to be treated as an octal value (decimal 8) or as a decimal value (10)?
Hi Guys...
I am newbie to awk and would like a solution to probably one of the simple practical questions.
I have a test file that goes as:
1,2,3,4,5,6
7,2,3,8,7,6
9,3,5,6,7,3
8,3,1,1,1,1
4,4,2,2,2,2
I would like to know how AWK can get me the distinct values say for eg: on col2... (22 Replies)
Hello,
I have a 1.6 GB file that I would like to modify by matching some ids in col1 with the ids in col 1 of file2.txt and save the results into a 3rd file.
For example:
File 1 has 1411 rows, I ignore how many columns it has (thousands)
File 2 has 311 rows, 1 column
Would like to... (7 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I am writing a script to process data from the ATP world tour.
I have a file which contains:
t=540 y=2011 r=1 p=N409
t=540 y=2011 r=2 p=N409
t=540 y=2011 r=3 p=N409
t=540 y=2011 r=4 p=N409
t=520 y=2011 r=1 p=N409
t=520 y=2011 r=2 p=N409
t=520 y=2011 r=3 p=N409
The... (4 Replies)
I am a new user of Unix/Linux, so this question might be a bit simple!
I am trying to join two (very large) files that both have different # of cols and rows in each file.
I want to keep 'all' rows and 'all' cols from both files in the joint file, and the primary key variables are in the rows.... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Please help with this.
I have several excel files (with and .xlsx format) with 10-15 columns each.
They all have the same type of data but the columns are not ordered in the same way.
Here is a 3 column example. What I want to do add the alphabet
from column 2 to column 3, provided... (9 Replies)
Hi. How can I read row number from one file and print that corresponding record present at that row in another file.
eg
file1
1
3
5
7
9
file2
11111
22222
33333
44444
55555
66666
77777
88888
99999 (3 Replies)
I need help with extract/print lines till stop pattern. This needs to happen after every 3rd occurrence of start pattern and continue till end of file. Consider below is an example of the log file. my start pattern will be every 3rd occurrence of ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND and stop pattern will be... (5 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have requirement to identify the records based on one column value.
the sample file as below:
ID AMT, AMT1
100,10, 2
100,20, 3
200,30, 0
200, 40, 0
300, 20, 2
300, 50, 2
400, 20, 1
400, 60, 0
for each ID, there 2 records, if any one record amt1 is 0, the in 4th col add... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ken6503
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
cmp
cmp(1) General Commands Manual cmp(1)Name
cmp - compare two files
Syntax
cmp [-l | -s] file1 file2 [ skip1 ] [ skip2 ]
Description
The command compares two files. If either file1 or file2 is `-', standard input is used for the file. With no options, makes no comment
if the files are the same. If they differ, it reports the byte and line number at which the difference occurred to standard output. If
one file is an initial subsequence of the other a message including the file name is written to standard error.
The optional skip1 and skip2 parameters are initial byte offsets into file1 and file2 respectively and may be either octal, by specifying a
leading 0, or decimal. When using skip1 and skip2 the offset is treated as the start of the respective input file. Only one option may be
specified at a time. Only one of the input files may be standard input at a time. Because the line number is not calculated when using
either of the options the use of either flag will increase the speed of
Options-l Long format: prints the byte number (decimal) and the differing bytes (octal) for each difference.
-s Suppresses normal output and sets the exit code only.
Diagnostics
Exit code 0 is returned for identical files, 1 for different files, and 2 for an inaccessible or missing argument.
See Alsocomm(1), diff(1)cmp(1)