Hey All,
On commad promt of a shell..
How can we move our cursor word by word.
Like Ctrl+A takes to the starting of the command...
Any shortcut like that..?
Thanks
pbsrinivas (1 Reply)
Hi All
Can u help me..
My problem is delete word per line
sample:
cat /tmp/file.txt
monitor 192.168.1.11 Copying files in current directory 1
monitor 192.168.1.1 Copying files in current directory 2
monitor 192.168.1.12 Copying files in current directory 3
monitor 192.168.1.14... (1 Reply)
Hello,
So I sorted my file as I was supposed to:
sort -n -r -k 2 -k 1 file1 | uniq > file2
and when I wrote
> cat file2
in the command line, I got what I was expecting, but in the script itself
...
sort -n -r -k 2 -k 1 averages | uniq > temp
cat file2
It wrote a whole... (21 Replies)
Hello All,
I am new to this shell scripting , I wanted to modify the output of my find command such that it does not display the path but only file names , for example I am searching for the files which are modified in the last 24 hours which is
find /usr/monitor/text/ -type f -mtime... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file in which I have to separate genes from phenotype data. I have written a program as given below which prints just the gene records.
1. But I want to print all the data under each specified record to the output file. So the file has all the data like for every record. An example... (2 Replies)
Hi again :)
This is just a sample whiptail menu.
Works great, but have been trying to get the chosen value into a variable but failing pretty bad...its ther but unsure how to echo it out when needed
#! /bin/bash
#This is the menu
whiptail --title "Menu example" --menu "Choose an... (9 Replies)
I have the following script that greps lines containing "AT" from data files data1.hsq through data1000.hsq, then cuts their second column and puts in data files called perm1 through perm1000.
I want to modify the script so that instead of putting the data in separate data files perm1 through... (2 Replies)
I want to determine if there's any xml files exist & if so copy each xml to that directory. Is my code correct for doing that? I can't test my script yet. Somebody please explain it to me please?
if ]; then
#print "No Status type XML files received from server in $DIRECTORY"
else
for... (2 Replies)
Given the output below (simplified) extracted from the comparison of two curl -I commands saved in two different files, I am looking for the best approach to highlight the following scenarios in a script:
this header exists only in file1.txt but this one does not
this one exists in both cases... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: muppets
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
colors
COLORS(3) libbash colors Library Manual COLORS(3)NAME
colors -- libbash library for setting tty colors.
SYNOPSIS
colorSet <color>
colorReset
colorPrint [<indent>] <color> <text>
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color> <text>
DESCRIPTION
General
colors is a collection of functions that make it very easy to put colored text on tty.
The function list:
colorSet Sets the color of the prints to the tty to COLOR
colorReset Resets current tty color back to normal
colorPrint Prints TEXT in the color COLOR indented by INDENT (without adding a newline)
colorPrintN The same as colorPrint, but trailing newline is added
Detailed interface description follows.
Available colors:
Green
Red
Yellow
White
The color parameter is non-case-sensitive (i.e. RED, red, ReD, and all the other forms are valid and are the same as Red).
FUNCTIONS DESCRIPTIONS
colorSet <color>
Sets the current printing color to color.
colorReset
Resets current tty color back to normal.
colorPrint [<indent>] <color>
Prints text using the color color indented by indent (without adding a newline).
Parameters:
<indent>
The column to move to before start printing. This parameter is optional. If ommitted - start output from current cursor position.
<color>
The color to use.
<color>
The text to print.
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color>
The same as colorPrint, except a trailing newline is added.
EXAMPLES
Printing a green 'Hello World' with a newline:
Using colorSet:
$ colorSet green
$ echo 'Hello World'
$ colorReset
Using colorPrint:
$ colorPrint 'Hello World'; echo
Using colorPrintN:
$ colorPrintN 'Hello World'
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <gil@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), libbash(1)Linux Epoch Linux