I want to know what is the total number like 1,144,750,000,000,000.
If you have a utility such as some of the results for a Google search like commify comma insertion linux OR unix you could use:
With a system like:
Best wishes ... cheers, drl
hi, :)
I have a file like this
10.456
123.567
456.876
234.987
........
.......
What i want to do is ia have to add all those numbers and put the result in some other file.
Any help pls.
cheers
RRK (8 Replies)
Hi all!
Hi all!
I am working with a problem to find the smallest floating point number that can be represented.
I am going in a loop ,stating with an initial value of 1.0 and then diving it by 10 each time thru the loop.
So the first time I am getting o.1 which I wanted.But from the next... (4 Replies)
Hi,
see the simple code below
double i;
i=8080.9940;
printf(" val :%.30f\n",i);
output i m getting is
val :8080.993999999999700000000000000
when i m expecting
val :8080.9940
what happens?how can i avoid it?
thanks... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have linux fedora 4 ver., 2.6 kernal. And qmail & mysql & samba servers are already configured on this server.
When I try to install any package like squidguard ,dansguardian,webmin,rsnapshots with command rpm -ivh . It is giving error as “Floating point exception"
Snap View is... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I' using bash and I would like to use "bc" to compute the ratio of of two numbers and assign the ratio to a variable.
The numbers are in a file, e.g.
196.304492
615.348986
Any idea how to do it?
N.B. I cannot change the file to have 196.304492 / 615.348986 as the file is produced by... (14 Replies)
Hello folks
I Hope everyone is fine. I am calculating number of bytes calculation from apache web log.
awk '{ sum += $10 } END { print sum }' /var/httpd/log/mydomain.log
7.45557e+09
it show above number, what should i do it sow number like 7455, i mean if after decimal point above 5 it... (5 Replies)
Hey,
I guess I am just to stupid and am not seeing the "wood for the trees", but I am always getting strange errors.
I want to create a mesh with coordinates like:
x y z
3.1 3.0 0.75 0 0 1
3.1 2.9 0.75 0 0 1
3.1 2.8 0.75 0 0 1
3.1 2.7 0.75 0 0 1
3.0 ... (10 Replies)
Anyone help me i cant found the error of floating point
if needed, i added the code complete
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <ctype.h>
typedef struct
{
int hh;
int mm;
int ss;
char nom;
int punt;
}cancion;
typedef struct... (9 Replies)
Hello,
I have often found bash to be difficult when it comes to floating point numbers. I have data with rows of tab delimited floating point numbers. I need to find the smallest number in each row that is not 0.0. Numbers can be negative and they do not come in any particular order for a given... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: LMHmedchem
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
funtbl
funtbl(1) SAORD Documentation funtbl(1)NAME
funtbl - extract a table from Funtools ASCII output
SYNOPSIS
funtable [-c cols] [-h] [-n table] [-p prog] [-s sep] <iname>
DESCRIPTION
[NB: This program has been deprecated in favor of the ASCII text processing support in funtools. You can now perform fundisp on funtools
ASCII output files (specifying the table using bracket notation) to extract tables and columns.]
The funtbl script extracts a specified table (without the header and comments) from a funtools ASCII output file and writes the result to
the standard output. The first non-switch argument is the ASCII input file name (i.e. the saved output from funcnts, fundisp, funhist,
etc.). If no filename is specified, stdin is read. The -n switch specifies which table (starting from 1) to extract. The default is to
extract the first table. The -c switch is a space-delimited list of column numbers to output, e.g. -c "1 3 5" will extract the first
three odd-numbered columns. The default is to extract all columns. The -s switch specifies the separator string to put between columns.
The default is a single space. The -h switch specifies that column names should be added in a header line before the data is output. With-
out the switch, no header is prepended. The -p program switch allows you to specify an awk-like program to run instead of the default
(which is host-specific and is determined at build time). The -T switch will output the data in rdb format (i.e., with a 2-row header of
column names and dashes, and with data columns separated by tabs). The -help switch will print out a message describing program usage.
For example, consider the output from the following funcnts command:
[sh] funcnts -sr snr.ev "ann 512 512 0 9 n=3"
# source
# data file: /proj/rd/data/snr.ev
# arcsec/pixel: 8
# background
# constant value: 0.000000
# column units
# area: arcsec**2
# surf_bri: cnts/arcsec**2
# surf_err: cnts/arcsec**2
# summed background-subtracted results
upto net_counts error background berror area surf_bri surf_err
---- ------------ --------- ------------ --------- --------- --------- ---------
1 147.000 12.124 0.000 0.000 1600.00 0.092 0.008
2 625.000 25.000 0.000 0.000 6976.00 0.090 0.004
3 1442.000 37.974 0.000 0.000 15936.00 0.090 0.002
# background-subtracted results
reg net_counts error background berror area surf_bri surf_err
---- ------------ --------- ------------ --------- --------- --------- ---------
1 147.000 12.124 0.000 0.000 1600.00 0.092 0.008
2 478.000 21.863 0.000 0.000 5376.00 0.089 0.004
3 817.000 28.583 0.000 0.000 8960.00 0.091 0.003
# the following source and background components were used:
source_region(s)
----------------
ann 512 512 0 9 n=3
reg counts pixels sumcnts sumpix
---- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
1 147.000 25 147.000 25
2 478.000 84 625.000 109
3 817.000 140 1442.000 249
There are four tables in this output. To extract the last one, you can execute:
[sh] funcnts -s snr.ev "ann 512 512 0 9 n=3" | funtbl -n 4
1 147.000 25 147.000 25
2 478.000 84 625.000 109
3 817.000 140 1442.000 249
Note that the output has been re-formatted so that only a single space separates each column, with no extraneous header or comment informa-
tion.
To extract only columns 1,2, and 4 from the last example (but with a header prepended and tabs between columns), you can execute:
[sh] funcnts -s snr.ev "ann 512 512 0 9 n=3" | funtbl -c "1 2 4" -h -n 4 -s " "
#reg counts sumcnts
1 147.000 147.000
2 478.000 625.000
3 817.000 1442.000
Of course, if the output has previously been saved in a file named foo.out, the same result can be obtained by executing:
[sh] funtbl -c "1 2 4" -h -n 4 -s " " foo.out
#reg counts sumcnts
1 147.000 147.000
2 478.000 625.000
3 817.000 1442.000
SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages
version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funtbl(1)