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Full Discussion: Venn Data Maker
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Venn Data Maker Post 302979842 by jacobs.smith on Friday 19th of August 2016 01:33:37 PM
Old 08-19-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by RudiC
And the second question?
I am loving your questions.

Glad to learn.

Here is a way I tried. But it has two disadvantages.

One - I can only do three sets. But my actual input has 7 and even more.

Two - I cannot write the first column saying unique or common.

Code:
for i in 100 010 001 110 101 011 111; do awk -F"," 'NR>1 {print $2$3$4}' 1 | grep $i | wc -l;done

Thanks
 

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Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)

NAME
Sort::Key::Maker - multikey sorter creator SYNOPSYS
# create a function that sorts strings by length: use Sort::Key::Maker sort_by_length => sub { length $_}, qw(integer); # create a multikey sort function; # first key is integer sorted in descending order, # second key is a string in default (ascending) order: use Sort::Key::Maker ri_s_keysort => qw(-integer string); # some sample data... my @foo = qw(foo bar t too tood mama); # and now, use the sorter functions previously made: # get the values on @foo sorted by length: my @sorted = sort_by_length @foo; # sort @foo inplace by its length and then by its value: ri_s_keysort_inplace { length $_, $_ } @foo; DESCRIPTION
Sort::Key::Maker is a pragmatic module that provides an easy to use interface to Sort::Key multikey sorting functionality. It creates multikey sorting functions on the fly for any key type combination and exports them to the caller package. The key types natively accepted are: string, str, locale, loc, integer, int, unsigned_integer, uint, number, num and support for other types can be added via Sort::Key::Register (or also via Sort::Key::register_type()). USAGE use Sort::Key::Maker foo_sort => @keys; exports two subroutines to the caller package: "foo_sort (&@)" and "foo_sort_inplace (&@)". Those two subroutines require a sub reference as their first argument and then respectively, the list to be sorted or an array. For instance: use Sort::Key::Maker bar_sort => qw(int int str); @bar=qw(doo tomo 45s tio); @sorted = bar_sort { unpack "CCs", $_ } @bar; # or sorting @bar inplace bar_sort_inplace { unpack "CCs", $_ } @bar; use Sort::Key::Maker foo_sort => &genmultikey, @keys; when the first argument after the sorter name is a reference to a subroutine it is used as the multikey extraction function. The generated sorter functions doesn't require neither accept one, i.e.: use Sort::Key::Maker sort_by_length => sub { length $_ }, 'int'; my @sorted = sort_by_length qw(foo goo h mama picasso); SEE ALSO
Sort::Key, Sort::Key::Register. Sort::Maker also available from CPAN provides similar functionality. AUTHOR
Salvador Fandin~o, <sfandino@yahoo.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2005 by Salvador Fandin~o This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.4 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.14.2 2010-04-16 Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)
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