Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Shell program question with Filenames and dates Post 303014752 by SK123 on Tuesday 20th of March 2018 10:14:07 AM
Old 03-20-2018
Hi

I had tried this, but I think the code is reading the string after the first occurrence of "_" as the basis to identify the date. However if few of my files has the naming convention of following, how do we deal with it?

Code:
abcdefgh_20180102.csv
abcdefgh_20180120.csv
xyz_20180121.csv
xyz_20180102.csv
abcdefgh_xyz_pqr_20180102.csv
abcdefgh_xyz_pqr_20180109.csv
abcdefgh_65325_parent_20180120.csv
abcdefgh_65325_parent_20180127.csv
xyz_34567_filter_20180121.csv
xyz_34567_filter_20180128.csv

Thanks & regards,
SK

Last edited by vgersh99; 03-20-2018 at 11:19 AM.. Reason: code tags, please!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

reading filenames inside a program

UNIX Sun Ultra60 5.5.1 Hello everybody, I have a problem that seems simple but turns out to be complex (for me at least). My program needs to open a directory (this part is easy), scan each filename and determine whether or not a file with the suffix (.07) exists. So the program would return... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: j_t_kim
5 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

While we are on the subject of dates. Another date question

This goes deeper into the date thing. I want to be able to check the date and time stamp in or on a file to see what the time span is. We have a job that runs several times an hour - kicked off through cron based on a trigger file. We want to keep track of each run and check the time between... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: MizzGail
14 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk question: Sum dates

Hi there, I have a logfile which has the following layout: 20080812 0 20 20080812 12 10 20080812 12 10 20080812 12 10 I want to sum the "12" on the last 3 lines and save the "20" on the first line. The final output should be 20080812 36 20 I think that should me more easier with... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: BufferExploder
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Question on reading dates in folders/files

Hi All, I have some folder that are named "FOLDERYYYYMM". I'm trying to piece together a .sh script that will look for the folder with the date. How can I get shell to see the date? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbbngowc
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Question/review my script: removing bad chars from filenames

The task: remove undesirable characters from filenames. Restrictions: Must use basic RE, base utilities (non-GNU) and /bin/sh (ash). No ksh, zsh, perl, etc. Below is what I've come up with. It seems to work OK but I'm open to shorter, more efficient alternatives. Inside the square... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: uiop44
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Spaces in filenames located in variables in shell.

Greetings. I am trying to do a script that will do some file copying for me. Unfortunately I have spaces in the directory names (which I cannot change) and the result is someone hard to achieve in shell scripts. I have searched everywhere on the web but does not manage to find the answer to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mr.Glaurung
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Filenames in CSH shell

Hi, I am running into a bit of a problem. I am trying to write a script that will run an interactive (fortran) program repeatedly to dump data across 36 data channels... anyway. I have gotten this far... #!/bin/csh set i=0 while ($i<2) fitsfilter $1<<EOF $i 0 9 1 1 g 2 1250 -100... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: madtowneast
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk program for calculating dates.

Hi All, I have a txt file which has hundreds of lines and 41 fields. I have a requirement to pick up field 14 from the text file which is a date fiels in the following format. Field 14 : Data Type : NUMERIC DATE (YYYYMMDD) Field Length : 8 Example of Data :20090415 Field 42 : Data Type... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nua7
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Storing filenames in an array in shell script

hi, i am writing a shell script in which i read a line in a variable. FNAME="s1.txt s2.txt s3.txt s4.txt s5.txt" i want to create a array and store single file names in a array.. so the array should contain arr="s1.txt" arr="s2.txt" arr="s3.txt" arr="s4.txt" arr="s5.txt" how to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Little
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help on Dates in Shell Scripting

Hi Experts, I am using the below code to get the previous day based on the date given as a input. #!/usr/bin/ksh datestamp=`date '+%Y%m%d'` yest=$((datestamp -1)) echo $yest Output: 20130714 How can i display the same output in 14/07/2013, i tired '+%d/%m/%y'` but i am getting... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: learner24
16 Replies
csv(n)								  CSV processing							    csv(n)

NAME
csv - Procedures to handle CSV data. SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.3 package require csv ?0.3? ::csv::join values {sepChar ,} ::csv::joinlist values {sepChar ,} ::csv::read2matrix chan m {sepChar ,} {expand none} ::csv::read2queue chan q {sepChar ,} ::csv::report cmd matrix ?chan? ::csv::split line {sepChar ,} ::csv::split2matrix m line {sepChar ,} {expand none} ::csv::split2queue q line {sepChar ,} ::csv::writematrix m chan {sepChar ,} ::csv::writequeue q chan {sepChar ,} DESCRIPTION
The csv package provides commands to manipulate information in CSV FORMAT (CSV = Comma Separated Values). COMMANDS
The following commands are available: ::csv::join values {sepChar ,} Takes a list of values and returns a string in CSV format containing these values. The separator character can be defined by the caller, but this is optional. The default is ",". ::csv::joinlist values {sepChar ,} Takes a list of lists of values and returns a string in CSV format containing these values. The separator character can be defined by the caller, but this is optional. The default is ",". Each element of the outer list is considered a record, these are separated by newlines in the result. The elements of each record are formatted as usual (via ::csv::join). ::csv::read2matrix chan m {sepChar ,} {expand none} A wrapper around ::csv::split2matrix (see below) reading CSV-formatted lines from the specified channel (until EOF) and adding them to the given matrix. For an explanation of the expand argument see ::csv::split2matrix. ::csv::read2queue chan q {sepChar ,} A wrapper around ::csv::split2queue (see below) reading CSV-formatted lines from the specified channel (until EOF) and adding them to the given queue. ::csv::report cmd matrix ?chan? A report command which can be used by the matrix methods format 2string and format 2chan. For the latter this command delegates the work to ::csv::writematrix. cmd is expected to be either printmatrix or printmatrix2channel. The channel argument, chan, has to be present for the latter and must not be present for the first. ::csv::split line {sepChar ,} converts a line in CSV format into a list of the values contained in the line. The character used to separate the values from each other can be defined by the caller, via sepChar, but this is optional. The default is ",". ::csv::split2matrix m line {sepChar ,} {expand none} The same as ::csv::split, but appends the resulting list as a new row to the matrix m, using the method add row. The expansion mode specified via expand determines how the command handles a matrix with less columns than contained in line. The allowed modes are: none This is the default mode. In this mode it is the responsibility of the caller to ensure that the matrix has enough columns to contain the full line. If there are not enough columns the list of values is silently truncated at the end to fit. empty In this mode the command expands an empty matrix to hold all columns of the specified line, but goes no further. The overall effect is that the first of a series of lines determines the number of columns in the matrix and all following lines are truncated to that size, as if mode none was set. auto In this mode the command expands the matrix as needed to hold all columns contained in line. The overall effect is that after adding a series of lines the matrix will have enough columns to hold all columns of the longest line encountered so far. ::csv::split2queue q line {sepChar ,} The same as ::csv::split, but appending the resulting list as a single item to the queue q, using the method put. ::csv::writematrix m chan {sepChar ,} A wrapper around ::csv::join taking all rows in the matrix m and writing them CSV formatted into the channel chan. ::csv::writequeue q chan {sepChar ,} A wrapper around ::csv::join taking all items in the queue q (assumes that they are lists) and writing them CSV formatted into the channel chan. FORMAT
Each record of a csv file (comma-separated values, as exported e.g. by Excel) is a set of ASCII values separated by ",". For other lan- guages it may be ";" however, although this is not important for this case (The functions provided here allow any separator character). If a value contains itself the separator ",", then it (the value) is put between "". If a value contains ", it is replaced by "". EXAMPLE
The record 123,"123,521.2","Mary says ""Hello, I am Mary""" is parsed as follows: a) 123 b) 123,521.2 c) Mary says "Hello, I am Mary" SEE ALSO
matrix, queue KEYWORDS
csv, matrix, queue, package, tcllib csv 0.3 csv(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy