I am trying to replace a certain value from one place in a file . In the below file at position 35 I will have 8 I need to modify all 8 in that position to 7
I tried
Also on a follow up if I want to replace 008 to 009 . 008 is on the same column 33-35. What should I do
Last edited by arunkumar_mca; 02-20-2019 at 11:18 PM..
Hi All,
I have a file which has data in following format:
"Body_Model","2/1/2007","2/1/2007"
"CSCH74","0","61"
"CSCS74","0","647"
"CSCX74","0","3"
"CSYH74","0","299"
"CSYS74","0","2514"
"CSYX74","0","3"
"Body_Model","3/1/2007","3/1/2007"
"CSCH74","0","88"
"CSCS74","0","489"... (3 Replies)
I have the below file ...where some of the column values should replaced with desired values ....below file u can find that 3 column where ever 'AAA' comes should replaced with ' CC '
NOTE : we have to pass the column number ,AAA,CC (modified value) as the parameters to the code.
... (6 Replies)
Can someone tell me how to change the first column in a very large 17k line file from a random 10 digit numeric value to a non numeric value. The format of lines in the file is:
1702938475,SNU022,201004
the first 10 numbers always begin with 170 (6 Replies)
Hello,
I have a file with four columns and I would like to replace values in the second column only.
An arbitrary example is:
100 A 105 B
200 B 205 C
300 C 305 D
400 D 405 E
500 E 505 F
I need to replace the second column as shown below:
... (4 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a file1.pdb in pdb format and a dat file2 containing values, corresponding to the atoms in the pdb file. these values (file2.dat) need to be in the column instead of the 0.00 (file1) values for each atom in file1.pdb .(the red values must be replaced by the blue ones,in order)... (11 Replies)
How could i take an input file and split the numeric values from the alpha values (123 vs abc) to distinc columns, and if the source is blank to keep it blank (null) in both of the new columns:
So if the source file had a column like:
Value:
|1 |
|2.3|
| |
|No|
I would... (7 Replies)
I have one file as it has the following format
File1
S No Site IP Address
1 Australia 192.168.0.1/26
2 Australia 192.168.0.2/26
3 Australia 192.168.0.3/26
I need awk/sed command to replace the column2 value ( under Site) with some other... (8 Replies)
From googling and reading man pages I figured out this sorts the first column by numeric values.
sort -g -k 1,1
Why does the -n option not work? The man pages were a bit confusing.
And what if I want to sort the second column numerically? I haven't been able to figure that out. The file... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
make_socksfc
MAKE_SOCKSFC(8) System Manager's Manual MAKE_SOCKSFC(8)NAME
make_socksfc - Generates frozen configuratyion file for SOCKS clients
SYNOPSIS
make_socksfc [infile [outfile] ]
DESCRIPTION
make_socksfc reads in a plain-text configuration file for the SOCKS clients and produces a frozen configuration file as the output.
Both arguments are optional. The default for infile is /etc/socks.conf; the default for outfile is /etc/socks.fc. You may specify infile
while omitting outfile, but you cannot specify outfile without also speficying infile.
The contents of the frozen configuration file is essentially the memory image of the parsed input file. Using the frozen configuration file
can reduce the start-up delay of the SOCKS client programs since they no longer have to parse the file contents.
When the SOCKS client starts, it always looks for the frozen configuration file /etc/socks.fc first . If that file is not found, it then
tries to use the plain-text configuration file /etc/socks.conf. If you use frozen configuration, you must remember to run make_socksfc
every time after you modify the plain-text file or the SOCKS clients will continue to use the frozen file of a previous configuration.
To find out the contents of a frozen configuration file, use dump_socksfc.
FILES
/etc/socks.fc, /etc/socks.conf
SEE ALSO dump_socksfc(8), socks.conf(5), socks.fc(5)AUTHOR
Ying-Da Lee, yingda@esd.sgi.com or yingda@best.com
May 6, 1996 MAKE_SOCKSFC(8)