Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Using sed to change file into an awk script Post 303037936 by jim mcnamara on Sunday 18th of August 2019 11:02:24 AM
Old 08-18-2019
Hmm. Assuming the file looks like your example -
FWIW you can do this many ways, you may be over thinking your task.
Example:

Code:
greek=$(grep -c "[Gg]reek$" infile)
latin=$(grep -c "[Ll]atin$" infile)
echo "greek= $greek   latin= $latin"

This provides the same information your awk preprocessing generates, with no intermediate files. And ignores upper/lowercase issues.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

filter parts of a big file using awk or sed script

I need an assistance in file generation using awk, sed or anything... I have a big file that i need to filter desired parts only. The objective is to select (and print) the report # having the string "apple" on 2 consecutive lines in every report. Please note that the "apple" line has a HEX... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: apalex
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to change ip using awk or sed .

How to change ip using awk or sed . #cat /etc/hosts 10.151.5.1 server1 10.151.5.2 server2 10.151.5.3 server3 10.151.5.4 server4 10.151.5.5 server5 Output: 10.151.5.1 server1 10.181.5.2 server2 10.151.5.3 server3 10.181.5.4 server4 10.181.5.5 server5 (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: kenshinhimura
9 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk/sed/ksh script to cleanup /etc/group file

Many of my servers' /etc/group file have many userid's that does not exist in /etc/passwd file and they need to be deleted. This happened due to manual manipulation of /etc/passwd files. I need to do this for 40 servers. Can anyone help me in achieving this? Even reducing a step or two will be... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: pdtak
6 Replies

4. Linux

SED/AWK Script to clear log file using timestamp?

I have a log file on our system which fills up with lines that have been timestamped, as follows.... 03/03/2008 10:56:06:815] (ERROR) balance: continuing session to genapp02 : 18500 03/03/2008 10:56:06:820] (ERROR) balance: continuing session to genapp02 : 18500 03/03/2008 10:56:07:003]... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: davesimm
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

To parse through the file and print output using awk or sed script

suppose if u have a file like that Hen ABCCSGSGSGJJJJK 15 Cock ABCCSGGGSGIJJJL 15 * * * * * * : * * * . * * * : Hen CFCDFCSDFCDERTF 30 Cock CHCDFCSDHCDEGFI 30 * . * * * * * * * : * * :* : : . The output shud be where there is : and . It shud... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cdfd123
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help with a script to process a CSV file using SED and AWK

I get a CSV file every day with 2 columns and multiple rows ex: date1,date2 ( both the fields are varchar fields) This data has to be updated in a table which is being done manually and i want to automate that. 1. I have to select all the data from the prod table( 2 columns { date1,date2}) into... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kkb
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Creating a sed script to change ip addresses in a file

So I'm new to this sed command and I am trying to create a script that replaces ip addresses when I name a file but can't tweak it to work. Here is what it looks like: #!/bin/bash # file=$1 # sed -e 's/-CPUaddr 10.30.10.166/-CPUaddr 10.30.10.151/g' -i "$file" sed -e 's/-CPUaddr... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: uradunce
10 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed substitution or awk, need to direct change the file

I want change the file when the line contains $(AA) but NOT contains $(BB), then change $(AA) to $(AA) $(BB) eg: $(AA) something $(AA) $(BB) something (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: yanglei_fage
7 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed/awk script to replace only FIRST comment in the file

My first comment on every file contains the license message. I want to replace with a new license message. I used the below sed script, which replaces all comments. What is the modification or any other method with awk script for the below to edit only the first comment(license message)? #sed -f... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vpshastry
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Datestamp format 2nd change in csv file (awk or sed)

I have a csv file formatted like this: 2014-08-21 18:06:26,A,B,12345,123,C,1232,26/08/14 18:07and I'm trying to change it to MM/DD/YYYY HH:MM for both occurances. I have got this: awk -F, 'NR <=1 {print;next}{"date +%d/%m/%Y\" \"%H:%m -d\""$1 "\""| getline dte;$1=dte}1' OFS="," test.csvThis... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: say170
6 Replies
PRECONV(1)						      General Commands Manual							PRECONV(1)

NAME
preconv - convert encoding of input files to something GNU troff understands SYNOPSIS
preconv [-dr] [-e encoding] [files ...] preconv -h | --help preconv -v | --version It is possible to have whitespace between the -e command line option and its parameter. DESCRIPTION
preconv reads files and converts its encoding(s) to a form GNU troff(1) can process, sending the data to standard output. Currently, this means ASCII characters and `[uXXXX]' entities, where `XXXX' is a hexadecimal number with four to six digits, representing a Unicode input code. Normally, preconv should be invoked with the -k and -K options of groff. OPTIONS
-d Emit debugging messages to standard error (mainly the used encoding). -Dencoding Specify default encoding if everything fails (see below). -eencoding Specify input encoding explicitly, overriding all other methods. This corresponds to groff's -Kencoding option. Without this switch, preconv uses the algorithm described below to select the input encoding. --help -h Print help message. -r Do not add .lf requests. --version -v Print version number. USAGE
preconv tries to find the input encoding with the following algorithm. 1. If the input encoding has been explicitly specified with option -e, use it. 2. Otherwise, check whether the input starts with a Byte Order Mark (BOM, see below). If found, use it. 3. Finally, check whether there is a known coding tag (see below) in either the first or second input line. If found, use it. 4. If everything fails, use a default encoding as given with option -D, by the current locale, or `latin1' if the locale is set to `C', `POSIX', or empty (in that order). Note that the groff program supports a GROFF_ENCODING environment variable which is eventually expanded to option -k. Byte Order Mark The Unicode Standard defines character U+FEFF as the Byte Order Mark (BOM). On the other hand, value U+FFFE is guaranteed not be a Unicode character at all. This allows to detect the byte order within the data stream (either big-endian or lower-endian), and the MIME encodings `UTF-16' and `UTF-32' mandate that the data stream starts with U+FEFF. Similarly, the data stream encoded as `UTF-8' might start with a BOM (to ease the conversion from and to UTF-16 and UTF-32). In all cases, the byte order mark is not part of the data but part of the encoding protocol; in other words, preconv's output doesn't contain it. Note that U+FEFF not at the start of the input data actually is emitted; it has then the meaning of a `zero width no-break space' character - something not needed normally in groff. Coding Tags Editors which support more than a single character encoding need tags within the input files to mark the file's encoding. While it is pos- sible to guess the right input encoding with the help of heuristic algorithms for data which represents a greater amount of a natural lan- guage, it is still just a guess. Additionally, all algorithms fail easily for input which is either too short or doesn't represent a natu- ral language. For these reasons, preconv supports the coding tag convention (with some restrictions) as used by GNU Emacs and XEmacs (and probably other programs too). Coding tags in GNU Emacs and XEmacs are stored in so-called File Variables. preconv recognizes the following syntax form which must be put into a troff comment in the first or second line. -*- tag1: value1; tag2: value2; ... -*- The only relevant tag for preconv is `coding' which can take the values listed below. Here an example line which tells Emacs to edit a file in troff mode, and to use latin2 as its encoding. ." -*- mode: troff; coding: latin-2 -*- The following list gives all MIME coding tags (either lowercase or uppercase) supported by preconv; this list is hard-coded in the source. big5, cp1047, euc-jp, euc-kr, gb2312, iso-8859-1, iso-8859-2, iso-8859-5, iso-8859-7, iso-8859-9, iso-8859-13, iso-8859-15, koi8-r, us-ascii, utf-8, utf-16, utf-16be, utf-16le In addition, the following hard-coded list of other tags is recognized which eventually map to values from the list above. ascii, chinese-big5, chinese-euc, chinese-iso-8bit, cn-big5, cn-gb, cn-gb-2312, cp878, csascii, csisolatin1, cyrillic-iso-8bit, cyrillic-koi8, euc-china, euc-cn, euc-japan, euc-japan-1990, euc-korea, greek-iso-8bit, iso-10646/utf8, iso-10646/utf-8, iso-latin-1, iso-latin-2, iso-latin-5, iso-latin-7, iso-latin-9, japanese-euc, japanese-iso-8bit, jis8, koi8, korean-euc, korean-iso-8bit, latin-0, latin1, latin-1, latin-2, latin-5, latin-7, latin-9, mule-utf-8, mule-utf-16, mule-utf-16be, mule-utf-16-be, mule-utf-16be-with-signature, mule-utf-16le, mule-utf-16-le, mule-utf-16le-with-signature, utf8, utf-16-be, utf-16-be-with-signature, utf-16be-with-signature, utf-16-le, utf-16-le-with-signature, utf-16le-with-signature Those tags are taken from GNU Emacs and XEmacs, together with some aliases. Trailing `-dos', `-unix', and `-mac' suffixes of coding tags (which give the end-of-line convention used in the file) are stripped off before the comparison with the above tags happens. Iconv Issues preconv by itself only supports three encodings: latin-1, cp1047, and UTF-8; all other encodings are passed to the iconv library functions. At compile time it is searched and checked for a valid iconv implementation; a call to `preconv --version' shows whether iconv is used. BUGS
preconv doesn't support local variable lists yet. This is a different syntax form to specify local variables at the end of a file. SEE ALSO
groff(1) the GNU Emacs and XEmacs info pages Groff Version 1.22.2 7 February 2013 PRECONV(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:18 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy