Hi, all,
I wonder if I can use sed to insert a string which has a colon.
I have a txt file a.txt like the following
TRAIN/DR1/FCJF0/SI1027.MFC
TRAIN/DR1/FCJF0/SI1657.MFC
I want to insert a string C:/TIMIT/TIMIT at the begining of each line.
I use the commond:
TIM=C\:/TIMIT/TIMIT... (2 Replies)
I know how to grep, copy and paste a string from a line. Now, what i want to do is to find a string and print a string from the line below it. To demonstrate:
Name 1: ABC Age: 3
Sex: Male
Name 2: DEF Age: 4
Sex: Male
Output:
3 Male
I know how to get "3". My biggest problem is to... (4 Replies)
How to print the strings within a line between two spaces .
<ns1:providerErrorCode>141</ns1:providerErrorCode> <ns1:providerErrorText>business_rule_exception-Server.404:Cannot proceed because the subscriber with phone number is either suspended or the account has an unpaid... (8 Replies)
Dear All,
I am new to shell script.I want to print following string:
"E:\OutputRef\ExtendedTestObjectModel\Test.txt"
For that i am using:
echo "$ADL_ODT_REF${ADL_ODT_SLASH}ExtendedTestObjectModel${ADL_ODT_SLASH}$ResultFile"
where - $ADL_ODT_REF is E:\OutputRef
$ADL_ODT_SLASH... (5 Replies)
i have a file that looks like this
ABC123
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaasssssssssssssssffhhh
ABC234
EMPTY
ABC652
jhfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffkkkkkkkkkkkk
i want to grep "EMPTY" and print ABC234 (3 Replies)
Hi,
Is there a way in Korn Shell that I can run multiple commands stored as a semi-colon separated string, e.g.,
# vs="echo a; echo b;"
# $vs
a; echo b;
I want to be able to store commands in a variable, then run all of it once and pipe the whole output to another program without using... (2 Replies)
Hi I have a requirment here. I have to out the string after the particular word. for example i have the to extract the first word after the word disk. help me out. i have tried the folloing code but it is not giving the output which i need.
awk -F"*disk " '{print $1}'
grep -n -o '' file
Input... (2 Replies)
There was a sample code on forum I found sometime back:
$ f() { local foo=; : ${foo=unset}; declare -p foo; }; f
declare -- foo=""
$ f() { local foo; : ${foo=unset}; declare -p foo; }; f
declare -- foo="unset"
Can someone explain why was colon (:) is being used here. Whats its use? (4 Replies)
Ok I would like to do the following
file test contains the following lines. between the lines ABC there may be any amount of lines up to the next ABC entry.
I want to grep for the filename.txt entry and print the lines in between (and including that line) up to and including the last line... (3 Replies)
I have entries like below in a file
11.22.33.44:80
22.33.44.55:81
:::587
:::465
What I need is to take out the part after colon ( : )
Output should be as follows.
80
81
587
465
I used cut -d: -f 2 but its not working as dedired. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anil510
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
grep
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)NAME
grep - search a file for lines containing a given pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [-elnsv] pattern [file] ...
OPTIONS -e-e pattern is the same as pattern
-c Print a count of lines matched
-i Ignore case
-l Print file names, no lines
-n Print line numbers
-s Status only, no printed output
-v Select lines that do not match
EXAMPLES
grep mouse file # Find lines in file containing mouse
grep [0-9] file # Print lines containing a digit
DESCRIPTION
Grep searches one or more files (by default, stdin) and selects out all the lines that match the pattern. All the regular expressions
accepted by ed and mined are allowed. In addition, + can be used instead of * to mean 1 or more occurrences, ? can be used to mean 0 or 1
occurrences, and | can be used between two regular expressions to mean either one of them. Parentheses can be used for grouping. If a
match is found, exit status 0 is returned. If no match is found, exit status 1 is returned. If an error is detected, exit status 2 is
returned.
SEE ALSO cgrep(1), fgrep(1), sed(1), awk(9).
GREP(1)