Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Shell script to apply functions to multiple columns dynamically Post 303025732 by mkathi on Saturday 10th of November 2018 08:45:48 PM
Old 11-10-2018
Hello you are right

I have to pass the input as arrays yes and i did make a typo near the echo

yes the echo at the end is outside the loop so it will only print out the last row i think

issue is even if i pass the target as variable the code is only picking the first value passed generating the md5 and outputting the md5 for that line. I am trying to figure out how can i loop through all the columns passed inside the array and concatenate them using, and then calculate their md5 and then write it back to the file as a new column.

I know its a strange requirement Please point me to the write direction

I m trying something like this with no avail


Code:
#!/usr/bin/sh

target=("id,name")  
target_idx=()   # the column number of that field
{
  # reading header.
for i in $(echo $target | sed "s/,/ /g");do # trying to pass the comma seperated values inside target variable
  IFS=, read -r -a header
  for idx in "${!header[@]}"; do  # and look for the target field in it
    [[ ${header[$idx]} = $target ]] && { target_idx=$idx; break; }
  done
 done
  # then, iterate over lines
  while IFS=, read -r -a line; do
    a=$(echo -n ${line[$target_idx]}|md5sum)
    echo "$line"
  done
}

------ Post updated at 01:45 AM ------

Just a thought may be i should change my thinking. Just throwing it out i still did not figure out how to write the code but i may have a starting point

step one is if i can concatenate all the column names i send as a parameter to the script and then apply md5 function on it and then store the result of the output in a column in the end does this make any sense.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

reallocating structures dynamically in functions

I've recently started using structures, but I am having problems in allocating the structure dynamically. In the code below if i allocate the structure in the main program it works fine, and i get the expected output. However if i use the function rper below to increase the size of the structure i... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cezaryn
0 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Managing dynamically multiple shell

I want to launch some shell scripts. I would have the possibility to change the number of shell scripts launched dynamically by modifying a variable, or a configuration file. For example, I start to launch 4 scripts at the same time, and after that, by modifying a variable, 6 scripts are... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gonzo38
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script dynamically case in VAR

Hallo, I am working on a kdialog. This shall be able to load the required commands from a .conf file. First step runs good by loading the entries (selectabel entries) in a variable: MIRRORSELECT=$(kdialog --radiolist "Select your nearest mirror" $VAR1) The kdialog is accordingly correct... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ACTGADE
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to create the files dynamically in c shell script

how can i CREATE a txt file dynamically in c shell: for instance: #! /bin/csh for each i (*) cat>file$i.txt for each j do .... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jdsignature88
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to run multiple functions in Background in UNIX Shell Scripting?

Hi, I am using ksh , i have requirement to run 4 functions in background , 4 functions call are available in a case that case is also in function, i need to execute 1st function it should run in background and return to case and next i will call 2nd function it should run in background and... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthikram
8 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Creating IN list in PLSQL script dynamically by using shell script

Hi all, I have a PLSQL script which has a IN list where it takes some ids as input. For example SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEE WHERE EMPLOYEE_ID IN (comma separated list ) I want to run this quest inside a shell script but I would like to prepare the IN list dynamically where the employee ids... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: LoneRanger
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read Two Columns - Apply Condition on Six other columns

Hello All, Here is my input univ1 chr1 100 200 - GeneA 500 1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 univ1 chr1 100 200 - GeneA 600 1 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 univ1 chr1 100 200 - GeneA 700 1 0 0.4 0.4 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How can I apply 'date' command to specific columns, in a BASH script?

Hi everyone, I have a situation in which I have multiple (3 at last count) date columns in a CSV file (, delim), which need to be changed from: January 1 2017 (note, no comma after day) to: YYYY-MM-DD So far, I am able to convert a date using: date --date="January 12, 1990" +%Y-%m-%d ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: richardsantink
7 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to apply the update statement in multiple servers on multiple dbs at a time .?

Hi , Can any please help the below requirement on all multiple servers and multiple dbs. update configuration set value='yes' ;1) the above statement apply on 31 Databases at a time on different Ip address eg : 10.104.1.12 (unix ip address ) the above ip box contains 4 db's eg : db... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkat918
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to print multiple required columns dynamically in a file using the header name?

Hi All, i am trying to print required multiple columns dynamically from a fie. But i am able to print only one column at a time. i am new to shell script, please help me on this issue. i am using below script awk -v COLT=$1 ' NR==1 { for (i=1; i<=NF; i++) { ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: balu1234
2 Replies
funtablerowput(3)						SAORD Documentation						 funtablerowput(3)

NAME
FunTableRowPut - put Funtools rows SYNOPSIS
int FunTableRowPut(Fun fun, void *rows, int nev, int idx, char *plist) DESCRIPTION
The FunTableRowPut() routine writes rows to a FITS binary table, taking its input from an array of user structs that contain column values selected by a previous call to FunColumnSelect(). Selected column values are automatically converted from native data format to FITS data format as necessary. The first argument is the Fun handle associated with this row data. The second rows argument is the array of user structs to output. The third nrow argument specifies the number number of rows to write. The routine will write nrow records, starting from the location speci- fied by rows. The fourth idx argument is the index of the first raw input row to write, in the case where rows from the user buffer are being merged with their raw input row counterparts (see below). Note that this idx value is has nothing to do with the row buffer specified in argument 1. It merely matches the row being written with its corresponding (hidden) raw row. Thus, if you read a number of rows, process them, and then write them out all at once starting from the first user row, the value of idx should be 0: Ev ebuf, ev; /* get rows -- let routine allocate the row array */ while( (ebuf = (Ev)FunTableRowGet(fun, NULL, MAXROW, NULL, &got)) ){ /* process all rows */ for(i=0; i<got; i++){ /* point to the i'th row */ ev = ebuf+i; ... } /* write out this batch of rows, starting with the first */ FunTableRowPut(fun2, (char *)ebuf, got, 0, NULL); /* free row data */ if( ebuf ) free(ebuf); } On the other hand, if you write out the rows one at a time (possibly skipping rows), then, when writing the i'th row from the input array of rows, set idx to the value of i: Ev ebuf, ev; /* get rows -- let routine allocate the row array */ while( (ebuf = (Ev)FunTableRowGet(fun, NULL, MAXROW, NULL, &got)) ){ /* process all rows */ for(i=0; i<got; i++){ /* point to the i'th row */ ev = ebuf+i; ... /* write out the current (i.e., i'th) row */ FunTableRowPut(fun2, (char *)ev, 1, i, NULL); } /* free row data */ if( ebuf ) free(ebuf); } The final argument is a param list string that is not currently used. The routine returns the number of rows output. This should be equal to the value passed in the third nrow</B argument. When FunTableRowPut() is first called for a given binary table, Funtools checks to see of the primary header has already been written (either by writing a previous row table or by writing an image.) If not, a dummy primary header is written to the file specifying that an extension should be expected. After this, a binary table header is automatically written containing information about the columns that will populate this table. In addition, if a Funtools reference handle was specified when this table was opened, the parameters from this Funtools reference handle are merged into the new binary table header. In a typical Funtools row loop, you read rows using FunTableRowGet()() and write rows using FunTableRowPut(). The columns written by FunT- ableRowPut()() are those defined as writable by a previous call to FunColumnSelect(). If that call to FunColumnSelect also specified merge=[update|replace|append], then the entire corresponding raw input row record will be merged with the output row according to the merge specification (see FunColumnSelect() above). A call to write rows can either be done once, after all rows in the input batch have been processed, or it can be done (slightly less effi- ciently) one row at a time (or anything in between). We do recommend that you write all rows associated with a given batch of input rows before reading new rows. This is required if you are merging the output rows with the raw input rows (since the raw rows are destroyed with each successive call to get new rows). For example: Ev buf, ev; ... /* get rows -- let routine allocate the row array */ while( (buf = (Ev)FunTableRowGet(fun, NULL, MAXROW, NULL, &got)) ){ /* point to the i'th row */ ev = buf + i; .... process } /* write out this batch of rows */ FunTableRowPut(fun2, buf, got, 0, NULL); /* free row data */ if( buf ) free(buf); } or Ev buf, ev; ... /* get rows -- let routine allocate the row array */ while( (buf = (Ev)FunTableRowGet(fun, NULL, MAXROW, NULL, &got)) ){ /* process all rows */ for(i=0; i<got; i++){ /* point to the i'th row */ ev = buf + i; ... process /* write out this batch of rows with the new column */ if( dowrite ) FunTableRowPut(fun2, buf, 1, i, NULL); } /* free row data */ if( buf ) free(buf); } Note that the difference between these calls is that the first one outputs got rows all at once and therefore passes idx=0 in argument four, so that merging starts at the first raw input row. In the second case, a check it made on each row to see if it needs to be output. If so, the value of idx is passed as the value of the i variable which points to the current row being processed in the batch of input rows. As shown above, successive calls to FunTableRowPut() will write rows sequentially. When you are finished writing all rows in a table, you should call FunFlush() to write out the FITS binary table padding. However, this is not necessary if you subsequently call FunClose() with- out doing any other I/O to the FITS file. Note that FunTableRowPut() also can be called as FunEventsPut(), for backward compatibility. SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funtablerowput(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:28 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy