11-22-2016
Apologies for the delayed response. While the code here would work that is because we know it has 2 records at the 80th and 160th positions, in actual files there would be thousands or tens of thousands of records. So is there a way to cut or grep each record (from the beginning of the file counting 80 ^@ delimiters), then move it to a temp file, add a \n, then add the second record, and so on, till the end of the file. So that the end result is a file with each record in a row.
Appreciate all your assistance. Thanks.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Guys,
I want to write a perl/shell script do parse the following file
input file content
NPA-NXX SC
2084549 45
2084552 45
2084563 2007
2084572 45
2084580 45
3278411 45
3278430 45
3278493 530
3278507 530... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pistachio
3 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need add leading zeroes to a field in a file based on the character count. The field can be of 1 character to 6 character length. I need to make the field 14bytes.
eg:
8351,20,1
8351,234,6
8351,2,0
8351,1234,2
8351,123456,1
8351,12345,2
This should become.
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gpaulose
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a No Delimiter variable length text file with following schema -
Column Name Data length
Firstname 5
Lastname 5
age 3
phoneno1 10
phoneno2 10
phoneno3 10
sample data - ... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gaurav Martha
16 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi not sure if this is possible but I need some help with a bash script, I have a text file and on the first line that starts with 7150230 I need it to put a 1 at position 79 and a 2 at position 88, this is where it gets complicated, on the next line it finds that starts with 7150230 I then need it... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: firefox2k2
8 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a requirement where in I need to insert delimiters before the last column of the total delimiters is less than a specified number.
Say if the delimiters is less than 139, I need to insert 2 columns ( with blanks) before the last field
awk -F 'Ç' '{ if (NF-1 < 139)} END { "Insert 2... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunkesi
5 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have file listed in my directory in following format
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 3 16:06 test20141002150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 4 16:06 test20141003150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 5 16:06 test20141005150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: krish2014
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have tried to remove dublicate lines based on first column with pipe delimiter . but i ma not able to get some uniqu lines
Command : sort -t'|' -nuk1 file.txt
Input :
38376KZ|09/25/15|1.057
38376KZ|09/25/15|1.057
02006YB|09/25/15|0.859
12593PS|09/25/15|2.803... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: parithi06
2 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Folks,
I have a file with fields as follows which has last field in multiple lines. I would like to combine a line which has three fields with single field line for as shown in expected output. Please help.
INPUT
hname01 windows appnamec1eda_p1, ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: shunya
5 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I want to count the number of lines, I need this result be a number, and sum the last numeric column, I had done to make this one at time, but I need to make this for a crontab, so, it has to be an script, here is my lines:
It counts the number of lines:
egrep -i String file_name_201611* |... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Elly
5 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a huge file (around 4-5 GB containing 20 million rows) which has text like:
<EOFD>11<EOFD>22<EORD>2<EOFD>2222<EOFD>3333<EORD>3<EOFD>44<EOFD>55<EORD>66<EOFD>888<EOFD>9999<EORD>
Actually above is an extracted file from a Sql Server with each field delimited by <EOFD> and each row ends... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: amvip
8 Replies
PSC(1) General Commands Manual PSC(1)
NAME
psc - prepare sc files
SYNOPSIS
psc [-fLkrSPv] [-s cell] [-R n] [-C n] [-n n] [-d c]
DESCRIPTION
Psc is used to prepare data for input to the spreadsheet calculator sc(1). It accepts normal ascii data on standard input. Standard out-
put is a sc file. With no options, psc starts the spreadsheet in cell A0. Strings are right justified. All data on a line is entered on
the same row; new input lines cause the output row number to increment by one. The default delimiters are tab and space. The column for-
mats are set to one larger than the number of columns required to hold the largest value in the column.
OPTIONS
-f Omit column width calculations. This option is for preparing data to be merged with an existing spreadsheet. If the option is not
specified, the column widths calculated for the data read by psc will override those already set in the existing spreadsheet.
-L Left justify strings.
-k Keep all delimiters. This option causes the output cell to change on each new delimiter encountered in the input stream. The
default action is to condense multiple delimiters to one, so that the cell only changes once per input data item.
-r Output the data by row first then column. For input consisting of a single column, this option will result in output of one row
with multiple columns instead of a single column spreadsheet.
-s cell
Start the top left corner of the spreadsheet in cell. For example, -s B33 will arrange the output data so that the spreadsheet
starts in column B, row 33.
-R n Increment by n on each new output row.
-C n Increment by n on each new output column.
-n n Output n rows before advancing to the next column. This option is used when the input is arranged in a single column and the
spreadsheet is to have multiple columns, each of which is to be length n.
-d c Use the single character c as the delimiter between input fields.
-P Plain numbers only. A field is a number only when there is no imbedded [-+eE].
-S All numbers are strings.
-v Print the version of psc
SEE ALSO
sc(1)
AUTHOR
Robert Bond
PSC 7.16 19 September 2002 PSC(1)