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1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
Is there a grep commands for numbers w/decimal points
Display lines for students with GPA above 3.69 but less than 4.0
2. Relevant commands, code, scripts, algorithms: use of grep
3. The attempts at a solution (include all code and scripts):
I have tried a lot of combinations no luck yet
Waubonsee Community College
Sugar Grove Illinois
Professor: Tim Lippold
Linux/UNIX Operating System CIS180
Book being used is Harley Hahn's Guide to Unix and Linux
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Last edited by jetoutant; 11-23-2017 at 10:50 PM..
Reason: code tag
Hello...
I am new to unix and I am wondering if in a C-shell script , Are we supposed to use only whole numbers........ for example..if a program needs to calculate the average of some numbers........
@ avg = (($1 +$2 + $3)/3)) is returning a whole number.........How can a decimal be... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
Here is my original string: 192.168.2.1.8088. The target string I want: 192.168.2.1, how can I use awk or sed or other command to get rid of .8088 in the string?
Thanks,
Ray (9 Replies)
Hi Experts,
Quick quesion:
I want to sort this in the file , but not working, when using # sort file name
305.932
456.470
456.469
456.468
456.467
172.089
456.467
456.466
456.465
111.573
111.578
111.572
111.572
87.175
87.174
75.898 (4 Replies)
I have a file full of coordinates of the form:
37.68899917602539 58.07500076293945 57.79100036621094
The numbers don't always have the same number of decimal points. I need to reduce the decimal points of all the numbers (there are 128 rows of 3 numbers) to 2.
I have tried to do this... (2 Replies)
i am having a varialbe a , which is input to my file
i want to multiply this input with value .43, and assign it to variable b.
i tried it as below:
#!/bin/sh
a=$1
b=`expr $1\*0.43`
echo b=$b
error : expr: non-integer argument
Please tell me , how to do this.
Thanks (10 Replies)
Hi All,
I would like to set decimal point to 16 in the following bash script but it has syntax error at }:
awk '{printf"%.16e", (a<500,a++,$1/(a*1.1212121212121229e-02))}' input.dat >output.datHow may I set it in the correct way please? Thank you very much! (6 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a txt file with only one column which contains p values. My data looks like this:
5.04726976606584e-190
2.94065711152402e-189
2.94065711152402e-189
9.19932135717279e-176
1.09472516659859e-170
1.24974648916809e-170
0.1223974648916
0.9874974648916
...
what I want... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have one input file which is delimited by pipe. I want to put decimal points in this input file at particular position in particular column and also get the negative sign (if any) at start of that column.
$ cat Input_file.txt
11|10102693|1|20151202|10263204|20151127|N|0001... (7 Replies)
Hi!
I found and then adapt the code for my pipeline...
awk -F"," -vOFS="," '{printf "%0.2f %0.f\n",$2,$4}' xxx > yyy
I add -F"," -vOFS="," (for input and output as csv file) and I change the columns and the number of decimal...
It works but I have also some problems... here my columns
... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: echo manolis
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
svk::log::filter::grep
SVK::Log::Filter::Grep(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation SVK::Log::Filter::Grep(3)SYNOPSIS
SVK::Log::Filter::Grep - search log messages for a given pattern
DESCRIPTION
The Grep filter requires a single Perl pattern (regular expression) as its argument. The pattern is then applied to the svn:log property
of each revision it receives. If the pattern matches, the revision is allowed to continue down the pipeline. If the pattern fails to
match, the pipeline immediately skips to the next revision.
The pattern is applied with the /i modifier (case insensitivity). If you want case-sensitivity or other modifications to the behavior of
your pattern, you must use the "(?imsx-imsx)" extended pattern (see "perldoc perlre" for details). For example, to search for log messages
that match exactly the characters "foo" you might use
svk log --filter "grep (?-i)foo"
However, to search for "foo" without regards for case, one might try
svk log --filter "grep foo"
The result of any capturing parentheses inside the pattern are not available. If demand dictates, the Grep filter could be modified to
place the captured value somewhere in the stash for other filters to access.
If the pattern contains a pipe character ('|'), it must be escaped by preceding it with a '' character. Otherwise, the portion of the
pattern after the pipe character is interpreted as the name of a log filter.
STASH /PROPERTY MODIFICATIONS
Grep leaves all properties and the stash intact.
perl v5.10.0 2008-08-04 SVK::Log::Filter::Grep(3)