Hi,
I have a comma delimited file. I want to sort the fields alphabetically and again store them in a comma delimited file.
For example, My file looks like this.
abc,aaa,xyz,xxx,def
pqr,ggg,eee,iii,qqq
zyx,lmo,pqr,abc,fff
and I want my output to look like this, all fields sorted... (3 Replies)
I'm working on formatting some attendance data to meet a vendors requirements to upload to their system. With some help on the forums here, I have the data close. But they've since changed what they want.
The vendor wants me to submit three fields to them. Field 1 is the studentid field,... (4 Replies)
I have a large flat file with variable length fields that are pipe delimited. The file has no new line or CR/LF characters to indicate a new record. I need to parse the file and after some number of fields, I need to insert a CR/LF to start the next record.
Input file ... (2 Replies)
Gents,
I have a large file and each line of the file contains more than 200 bytes.Please let me a way to have the new line to start when the word "FIT" appears.
I was trialling with 'tr' command but i am not sure how to get it based on bytes and so it wasn't working...
Current... (3 Replies)
I'm facing a strange problem, please help me out.
Here we go.
I want to count number of fields in particular file.
filename and delimiter character will be passed through parameter.
On command prompt if i type following i get 27 as output (which is correct)
cat customer.dat | head -1 | awk... (12 Replies)
Hi,
I have a comma (,) delimited file, in which few fields are enclosed with in double quotes " ". I have to print the records in the file which donot have expected number of field with the line number.
File1
====
name,desgnation,doj,project #header#... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I need your help for below with shell scripting or perl
I/P
key, Sentence
customer1, I am David
customer2, I am Taylor
O/P
Key, Words
Customer1,I
Customer1,am
Customer1,David
Customer2,I
Customer2,am
Customer2,Taylor (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am required to arrange columns of a file i.e make the 15th column into the 1st column.
I am doing
awk 'begin {fs=ofs=","} {print $15,$1,$2,$3,$4,$5,$6,$7,$8,$9,$10,$11,$12,$13,$14}' ad.data>ad.csv
the problem is that column 15 gets to column 1 but it is not comma separated with the... (10 Replies)
Hi, I have a rquirement in unix as below .
I have a text file with me seperated by | symbol and i need to generate a excel file through unix commands/script so that each value will go to each column.
ex:
Input Text file:
1|A|apple
2|B|bottle
excel file to be generated as output as... (9 Replies)
For an Output like below
Input : <Subject A="I" B="1039502" C="2015-06-30" D="010101010101">
Output : <Subject D="010101010101" B="1039502" C="2015-06-30" A="I">
I have been using something like below but not getting the desired output :
awk -F ' ' '/Subject/ BEGIN{OFS=" ";}... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunkesi
19 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
ppmhist
ppmhist(1) General Commands Manual ppmhist(1)NAME
ppmhist - print a histogram of a portable pixmap
SYNOPSIS
ppmhist [-hexcolor] [-noheader] [-map] [-nomap] [-sort={frequency,rgb}] [ppmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a PPM image as input. Generates a histogram of the colors in the image, i.e. a list of all the colors and how many pixels of each
color are in the image.
OPTIONS
-sort={frequency,rgb}
The -sort option determines the order in which the colors are listed in the output. frequency means to list them in order of how
pixels in the input image have the color, with the most represented colors first. rgb means to sort them first by the intensity of
the red component of the color, the of the green, then of the blue, with the least intense first.
The default is frequency.
-hexcolor
Print the color components in hexadecimal. Default is decimal.
-noheader
Do not print the column headings.
-map Generates a PPM file of the colormap for the image, with the color histogram as comments.
-nomap Generates the histogram for human reading. This is the default.
SEE ALSO ppm(5), pgmhist(1), ppmtomap(1), pnmhistmap(1), ppmchange(1)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
17 September 2000 ppmhist(1)