It may just be a simple numeric sort, similar to how Unix will too if you ask it to. Letters are seen as sorted before numbers, however zero (a zero value, even if 75 characters long) will be before them all. A shorter number of leading zeros is sorted before longer ones, of the same value.
You might illustrate it with this:-
I hope that this helps,
Robin
Hello all,
Below is what I am trying to accomplish:
I have a file that looks like this
/* ----------------- xxxx.y_abcd_00000050 ----------------- */
jdghjghkla
sadgsdags
asdgsdgasd
asdgsagasdg
/* ----------------- xxxx.y_abcd_00000055 ----------------- */
sdgsdg
sdgxcvzxcbv... (8 Replies)
Hi All,
Sorry if the question is trivial for you but, I am new to Apache (2.0.63) and am trying to figure out how to display my 400.cgi. Here is what I have in httpd.conf
servername testing
DocumentRoot "/usr/local/apache2/htdocs"
ErrorDocument 400 /cgi-bin/badrequest-400.cgi
Here is... (0 Replies)
Hello. I have an RS/6000 running AIX 4 and I need to be able to see if there are any users that are logged on more than once from the same terminal so I can kick them off to make room for other terminals. 64 connections is the limit. Currently I am doing this:
who | more
and then manually... (11 Replies)
Hello,
I have a page where multiple fields and their values are displayed. But I am able to sort only a few fields. When I looked into the issue, it is seen that the for each row of info , an unique id is generated and id.txt is generated and saved. Only those fields which are inside that id.txt... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Let's say I have these 3 columns;
NGC1234 6 9
SL899 4 1
NGC1075 8 3
SL709 5 2
And I want to sort the data according to the first column (from a to z) like having them as:
NGC1075 8 3
NGC1234 6 9
SL709 5 2
SL899 4 1
Can that be done... (2 Replies)
Hello guys. I need help figuring this one out. It's probably really easy. Thanks in advance!
I have a file say for example containing this:
Rice Food
Carrots Food
Beans Food
Plates Kitchen
Fork Kitchen
Knives Kitchen
I need:
Food Rice, Carrots, Beans
Kitchen Plates, Fork,... (7 Replies)
Hello,
we received an IBM data cartridge with some data on it. It is a backup of an old IBM AS400 machine that had gone for good some years ago. I am able to extract data from this tape by using dd on a LINUX system:
Analysing the received file with forensic software (Xways, haven't tried Encase... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a long list made of 4 columns containing entries such as the following example:
a b c d
0 0 0 0
1 2 1 2
2 5 3 4
3 8 4 6
4 10 9 8
5 15 8 10So the top row is the header and I need to arrange the data in a way as to... (11 Replies)
My actual data looks like below
i have given only format. i can't give exact data format of my requirement due to some reasons. I this set of data lines about 5000
I need to come up with information in below
exact format of my data set :
Line<space>Number1<space>"somedata":... (1 Reply)
Hi,
PFB the data:
C_Random_130417
Java_Random_130518
Perl_Random_120519
Perl_Random_120528
so the values are ending with year,i.e.,130417
i want to sort the values with date.
i want the output like this:
Perl_Random_120519
Perl_Random_120528
C_Random_130417
Java_Random_130518
can... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: arindam guha
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
look
look(1) General Commands Manual look(1)NAME
look - Finds lines in a sorted list
SYNOPSIS
look [-df] [-tcharacter] string [file]
The look command prints all lines in a sorted file that begin with string.
OPTIONS
Uses dictionary order; only letters, digits, tabs, and spaces are used in comparisons. Searches without regard to case; treats uppercase
and lowercase as equivalent. Ignores character and characters following it in the search string. If you specify look -tC ABCDE, the
string ABCDE would become (in effect) AB, with CDE being ignored. This option is primarily for shell scripts, in which more than one
string is being processed.
DESCRIPTION
If no file is specified, look searches in the system word list /usr/share/dict/words, with the options -df assumed by default.
The look command uses binary search.
The -d and -f options affect comparisons as in sort.
NOTES
In order to use the -f option, you must first sort file with the sort -f command; otherwise, look displays only lowercase items.
If you do not specify -f, but specify a file (such as /usr/share/dict/words) that has been sorted with sort -f, look may not produce any
output.
EXAMPLES
To search a sorted file called sortfile for all lines that begin with the string as, enter: look as sortfile To search the system word list
for all words beginning with smi, enter: look smi
This might result in: smile smirk smith smithereens Smithfield Smithson smithy smitten
FILES
System word list.
SEE ALSO
Commands: grep(1), sort(1), spell(1)look(1)