I don't think that will fly. You seem to use underscores and spaces in team names inconsistently, don't set the correct OFS variable, and your file2 doesn't have a meaningful $2 in the structure that you show and describe.
Try instead
Hi all,
can you please help me in this one..
i have a many scripts in a directory & i get many requests to change the code of a particular script.
for example file abc.txt contains
#!/bin/bash
mumbai 102403445
chennai 123980123
delhi 3456268468
kolkata 465376832
#kolkat 462945959
... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to edit a file using shell script..For ex...a file called /etc/passwd..here I am searching for "ftp" if it is there just change it to "tftp" without using any temporary file. (3 Replies)
STEP 1
# Set variable
FILE=/tmp/mainfile
SEARCHFILE =/tmp/searchfile
# THIS IS THE MAIN FILE.
cat /tmp/mainfile
Interface Ethernet0/0 "outside", is up, line protocol is up
Hardware is i82546GB rev03, BW 100 Mbps
Full-Duplex(Full-duplex), 100 Mbps(100 Mbps)
MAC address... (6 Replies)
Hi I'm in the need of a script that basically takes two files and generates a 3rd. It reads from fileA and fileB and copies lines from fileA if they start by a word of fileB.
for example
fileA
The dog is beautful
Where is your cat
Why are you sad?
Help me!
fileB
The
Where
tree
dog... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am having a user.txt contains the name of users and passwd.txt file contains as passwd.txt
$cat usr.txt
root
bin
daemon
cap
$cat passwd.txt
root:x:0:0:root:/root:/usr/bin/ksh
bin:x:1:1:bin:/bin:/sbin/csh
daemon:x:2:2:daemon:/sbin:/usr/bin/ksh
adm:x:3:4:adm:/var/adm:/sbin/nologin... (4 Replies)
Hi Everybody..
I'm a "newbie" to using Command-line... A few half-remembered DOS commands from 30 years ago, and the very handy "Sudo rm -R pathname" REMOVE command...
I do a lot of "cleaning" of plain-text OCR text files. with assorted common
line-break, punctuation and capitalization... (1 Reply)
Hi
I have two csv files, with the following formats:
FileA.log:
Application, This occured blah
Application, That occured blah
Application, Also this
AnotherLog, Bob did this
AnotherLog, Dave did that
FileB.log:
Uk, London, Application, datetime, LaterDateTime, Today it had'nt... (8 Replies)
i have a file with some data and i need replace a perticular value with some other value from another another file
req:
file1.txt
abc,idle.txt,1234
file2.txt
5678
now the requirement is need to replace the "idle.txt" is with "mike_5678" here 5678 from file2.txt...
file2.txt contains only... (2 Replies)
Hello,
it would be great if someone can help me with the following:
I want to search for the rows from fileA in column 1 of fileB and output column 2 of fileB if found in fileC. In the moment I search within the complete file. How can I change the code so only column 1 is searched?
cat fileA... (7 Replies)
Lets say I have a massive directory which is filled with other directories all filled with different c++ scripts and I want a listing of all the scripts that contain the string: "this string". Is there a way to use a grep search for that? I tried:
grep -lr "this string" *
but I do not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Circuits
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
comm
comm(1) General Commands Manual comm(1)NAME
comm - Compares two sorted files.
SYNOPSIS
comm [-123] file1 file2
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
command: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
Suppresses output of the first column (lines in file1 only). Suppresses output of the second column (lines in file2 only). Suppresses
output of the third column (lines common to file1 and file2).
The command comm -123 produces no output.
OPERANDS
A pathname of the first file to be compared. If file1 is a hyphen (-), the standard input is used. A pathname of the second file to be
compared. If file2 is a hyphen (-), the standard input is used.
If both file1 and file2 refer to standard input or to the same FIFO special, block special or character special file, the results are unde-
fined.
DESCRIPTION
The comm command reads file1 and file2 and writes three columns to standard output, showing which lines are common to the files and which
are unique to each.
The leftmost column of standard output includes lines that are in file1 only. The middle column includes lines that are in file2 only.
The rightmost column includes lines that are in both file1 and file2.
If you specify a hyphen (-) in place of one of the file names, comm reads standard input.
Generally, file1 and file2 should be sorted according to the collating sequence specified by the LC_COLLATE environment variable. (See
sort(1).) If the input files are not sorted properly, the output of comm might not be useful.
EXIT STATUS
Successful completion. Error occurred.
EXAMPLES
In the following examples, file1 contains the following sorted list of North American cities:
Anaheim Baltimore Boston Chicago Cleveland Dallas Detroit Kansas City Milwaukee Minneapolis New York Oakland Seattle Toronto
The second file, file2, contains this sorted list:
Atlanta Chicago Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Montreal New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh San Diego San Francisco St. Louis
To display the lines unique to each file and common to the two files, enter: comm file1 file2
This command results in the following output: Anaheim Atlanta Baltimore Boston Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dal-
las Detroit Houston Kansas City Los Angeles Milwaukee Minneapolis Montreal New York Oakland Philadel-
phia Pittsburgh San Diego San Francisco Seattle St. Louis Toronto
The leftmost column contains lines in file1 only, the middle column contains lines in file2 only, and the rightmost column contains
lines common to both files. To display any one or two of the three output columns, include the appropriate flags to suppress the
columns you do not want. For example, the following command displays columns 1 and 2 only: comm -3 file1 file2
Anaheim
Atlanta Baltimore Boston
Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Detroit
Houston Kansas City
Los Angeles Milwaukee Minneapolis
Montreal Oakland
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
San Diego
San Francisco Seattle
St. Louis Toronto
The following command displays output from only the second column: comm -13 file1 file2
Atlanta Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Montreal Philadelphia Pittsburgh San Diego San Francisco St. Louis
The following command displays output from only the third column: comm -12 file1 file2
Chicago New York
SEE ALSO
Commands: cmp(1), diff(1), sdiff(1), sort(1), uniq(1)comm(1)