Hello,
Can someone kindy help me solve this problem..I am using SunOS shell script
I got a file A with following content:
This is my correct document. I wrote 111
This is my incorrect word , 222
This is my wrong statement 333
This is my correct document 444
This is my correct document 555... (9 Replies)
Hi Guys,
While I was writing one shell script , I just got struck at this point.
I need to extract words from a file at some specified position and do some comparison operation and need to replace the extracted word with another word.
Eg : I like Orange very much.
I need to replace... (19 Replies)
hello,
i 'd like your help about a bash script which:
1. finds inside the html file (it is attached with my post) the code number of the Latest Stable Kernel,
2.finds the link which leads to the download location of the Latest Stable Kernel version,
(the right link should lead to the file... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have a complex problem. I have a file in which words have been joined together:
Theboy ranslowly
I want to be able to correctly split the words using a lookup file in which all the words occur:
the
boy
ran
slowly
slow
put
child
ly
The lookup file which is meant for look up... (21 Replies)
I would like to cut words based on the word count of a line. This over here inspired me with some ideas but I wasn't able to get what I needed.
https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/105841-count-words-each-line-file-using-xargs.html
If the line has 6 words I would like to use this.... (8 Replies)
Hi ,
I need to count the number of errors associated with the two words occurring in the file. It's about counting the occurrences of the word "error" for where is the word "index.js". As such the command should look like. Please kindly help. I was trying: grep "error" log.txt | wc -l (1 Reply)
Hello,
I would like to change my setting in a file to the setting that user input.
For example, by default it is
ONBOOT=ON
When user key in "YES", it would be
ONBOOT=YES
--------------
This code only adds in the entire user input, but didn't replace it.
How do i go about... (5 Replies)
Hi Folks :)
I have a .txt file with thousands of words. I'm trying to sort the lines in order based on number of words per line.
Example
from:
word
word word word
word word
word word word word
word
word word word
word word
to desired output:
word (2 Replies)
I have the file like this.
cat 123.txt
<p> <table border='1' width='90%' align='center' summary='Script output'> <tr><td>text </td> </tr> </table> </p>
I want to replace some tags and want the output like below. I tried with awk & sed commands. But no luck. Could someone help me on this?
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: thomasraj87
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
canadian-english
canadian-english(5) Users' Manual canadian-english(5)NAME
canadian-english - a list of English words
DESCRIPTION
/usr/share/dict/canadian-english is an ASCII file which contains an alphabetic list of words, one per line.
FILES
There may be any number of word lists in /usr/share/dict/. /etc/dictionaries-common/words is a symbolic link to the currently-chosen
/usr/share/dict/<language> file. /usr/share/dict/words is a symbolic link to /etc/dictionaries-common/words, and is the name by which
other software should refer to the system word list. See select-default-wordlist(8) for more information, and/or to change the currently-
chosen word list.
The directory /usr/share/dict can contain word lists for many languages, with name of the language in English, e.g., /usr/share/dict/french
and /usr/share/dict/danish contain respectively lists of French and Danish words if they exist. Such lists should be coded using the ISO
8859-1 character set encoding.
SEE ALSO ispell(1), select-default-wordlist(8), and the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.
HISTORY
The words lists are not specific, and may be generated from any number of sources.
The system word list used to be /usr/dict/words. For compatibility, software should check that location if /usr/share/dict/words does not
exist.
AUTHOR
Word lists are collected and maintained by various authors. The Debian English word lists are built from the SCOWL (Spell- Checker Ori-
ented Word Lists) package, whose upstream editor is Kevin Atkinson <kevina@users.sourceforge.net>.
Debian 16 June 2003 canadian-english(5)