04-26-2019
! has a special meaning elsewhere in other systems. But. No "shell meaning" inside of a set of single tics, which is why the awk script must be set inside a pair of single tics, too.
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
a new bie to awk,
How to compare substring of col1,file 1 with
col2file2 and get file1contents+col3file2 as output.
file1
-----
kumarfghh,23,12000,5000
rajakumar,24,14000,2500
rajeshchauhan,25,16000,2600
manoj,26,17000,2300
file 2
--------
123,kumar,US,
123,sukumar,UK... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jerome Sukumar
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I know that 'brute-force' scripting could accomplish this with lots of cat/echo/cut/grep and more. But, because my real file has 800k records, and the matching files have 10-20k records, this is not time-possible or efficient.
I have input file:
> cat file_in... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: joeyg
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I've been trying to use awk to compare two files that have pretty much the same data in apart from certain lines where in one file a fields value has changed. I want to print the line from the first file and the changed line from the second file.
At the moment, all I can get it to do is print the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: dbrundrett
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to match 4 colums (first_name,last_name,dob,ssn) between 2 files and when there is an exact match I need to write out these matches to a new file with a combination of fields from file1 and file2. I've managed to come up with a way to match these 2 files based on the columns (see below)... (7 Replies)
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
hit brick wall while trying to knock up a script that will take values from the "lookup" file and look it up in the "target" file and return values that dont appear in "target" but do in "lookup".
just knocked up something using bits from previous threads but theres gotta be something wrong... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: jack.bauer
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to parse two files and get data that does not match in one of the columns ( column 3 in my case )
Data for two files are as follows
A.txt
=====
abc 10 5 0 1 16
xyz 16 1 1 0 18
efg 30 8 0 2 40
ijk 22 2 0 1 25
B.txt
=====
abc... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: roger67
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7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
i have one file say file1 having many records.Each record contains 2000 characters.i have to compare 192-200 (stored as name)characters in this file from other file say file2 having name stored in 1-9 characters.
after comparing i have to print the record from file1 in another file say file3 ... (3 Replies)
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8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I've two files with data like below:
file1.txt:
AAA,Apples,123
BBB,Bananas,124
CCC,Carrot,125
file2.txt:
Store1|AAA|123|11
Store2|BBB|124|23
Store3|CCC|125|57
Store4|DDD|126|38
So,the field separator in file1.txt is a comma and in file2.txt,it is |
Now,the output should be... (2 Replies)
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
so have file1 like this:
joe 123
jane 456
and then file2 like this:
123 left right
456 up down
joe ding dong
jane flip flop
what I need to do is compare col1 and col2 in file1 with col1 in file2 and generate a new file that has lines like this:
joe 123 ding dong left right
jane... (11 Replies)
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello ,
I am trying to compare two files i.e one master file and the other exclusion file. If the second field of masterfile is oracle8 then I need to compare the 3rd field of master file with the 1st field of all the rows of exclusion file else I need to compare 2nd field from master file with... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahul2662
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GLOB(7) BSD Miscellaneous Information Manual GLOB(7)
NAME
glob -- shell-style pattern matching
DESCRIPTION
Globbing characters (wildcards) are special characters used to perform pattern matching of pathnames and command arguments in the csh(1),
ksh(1), and sh(1) shells as well as the C library functions fnmatch(3) and glob(3). A glob pattern is a word containing one or more unquoted
'?' or '*' characters, or ``[..]'' sequences.
Globs should not be confused with the more powerful regular expressions used by programs such as grep(1). While there is some overlap in the
special characters used in regular expressions and globs, their meaning is different.
The pattern elements have the following meaning:
? Matches any single character.
* Matches any sequence of zero or more characters.
[..] Matches any of the characters inside the brackets. Ranges of characters can be specified by separating two characters by a '-' (e.g.
``[a0-9]'' matches the letter 'a' or any digit). In order to represent itself, a '-' must either be quoted or the first or last
character in the character list. Similarly, a ']' must be quoted or the first character in the list if it is to represent itself
instead of the end of the list. Also, a '!' appearing at the start of the list has special meaning (see below), so to represent
itself it must be quoted or appear later in the list.
Within a bracket expression, the name of a character class enclosed in '[:' and ':]' stands for the list of all characters belonging
to that class. Supported character classes:
alnum cntrl lower space
alpha digit print upper
blank graph punct xdigit
These match characters using the macros specified in ctype(3). A character class may not be used as an endpoint of a range.
[!..] Like [..], except it matches any character not inside the brackets.
Matches the character following it verbatim. This is useful to quote the special characters '?', '*', '[', and '' such that they
lose their special meaning. For example, the pattern ``\*[x]?'' matches the string ``*[x]?''.
Note that when matching a pathname, the path separator '/', is not matched by a '?', or '*', character or by a ``[..]'' sequence. Thus,
/usr/*/*/X11 would match /usr/X11R6/lib/X11 and /usr/X11R6/include/X11 while /usr/*/X11 would not match either. Likewise, /usr/*/bin would
match /usr/local/bin but not /usr/bin.
SEE ALSO
fnmatch(3), glob(3), re_format(7)
HISTORY
In early versions of UNIX, the shell did not do pattern expansion itself. A dedicated program, /etc/glob, was used to perform the expansion
and pass the results to a command. In Version 7 AT&T UNIX, with the introduction of the Bourne shell, this functionality was incorporated
into the shell itself.
BSD
November 30, 2010 BSD