Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Merging two lines into one (awk) Post 303039823 by RavinderSingh13 on Wednesday 16th of October 2019 05:20:53 AM
Old 10-16-2019
Hello sand1234,

Following is the complete explanation on same.

Code:
awk '                      ##Starting awk command here.
{
  ORS=length==80?"":RS     ##Setting ORS by checking condition if length of current line is 80 characters then set to NULL or set it as new line. 
                           ##Point to be noted here ORS and RS both have new line values by default from starting so setting them as per situation to either we want to print new line in output or not.
}
1
'  Input_file

Thanks,
R. Singh
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Merging lines into one

Hello. I would be very pleased if sb. help me to solve my problem. I've got a file with many non blank lines and I want to merge all lines into one not destroy the informations on them. I've tryed it with split and paste, tr, sed , but everything I've done has been wrong. I know about crazy... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Foxgard
8 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging files with AWK filtering and counting lines

Hi there, I have a couple of files I need to merge. I can do a simple merge by concatenating them into one larger file. But then I need to filter the file to get a desired result. The output looks like this: TRNH 0000000010941 ORDH OADR OADR ORDL ENDT 1116399 000000003... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meert
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging lines using AWK

Hi, Anybody help on this. :( I want to merge the line with previous line, if the line starts with 7. Otherwise No change in the line. Example file aa.txt is like below 122122 222222 333333 734834 702923 389898 790909 712345 999999 My output should be written in another file... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: senthil_is
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging lines in a file

Hi, I want to merge the lines starting with a comma symbol with the previous line of the file. Input : cat file.txt name1,name2 ,name3,name4 emp1,emp2,emp3 ,emp4 ,emp5 user1,user2 ,user3 Output name1,name2,name3,name4 emp1,emp2,emp3,emp4,emp5 (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohan_tuty
9 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

merging 2 lines with awk and stripping first two words

Hey all i am pretty new to awk... here my problem. My input is something like this: type: NSR client; name: pegasus; save set: /, /var, /part, /part/part2, /testpartition, /foo/bar,... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: bazzed
9 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging lines

Hi folks. Could somebody help me write a script or command that will look through a file and for every line that doesn't contain a certain value, merge it with the one above? For example, the file contains: SCOTLAND|123|ABC|yes SCOTLAND|456|DEF|yes SCOTLAND|78 9|GHI|yes ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MDM
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

merging two .txt files by alternating x lines from file 1 and y lines from file2

Hi everyone, I have two files (A and B) and want to combine them to one by always taking 10 rows from file A and subsequently 6 lines from file B. This process shall be repeated 40 times (file A = 400 lines; file B = 240 lines). Does anybody have an idea how to do that using perl, awk or sed?... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ink_LE
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging lines

Thanks it worked for me. I have one more question on top of that. We had few records which were splitted in 2 lines instead of one. Now i identified those lines. The file is too big to open via vi and edit it. How can i do it without opening the file. Suppose, I want line number 1001 & 1002 to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gangadhar Reddy
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging 2 lines together

I have a small problem, which due to my lack of knowledge, has left me unable to decipher some of the solutions that I looked at on these forums. So below is a piece of text, which I ran via cat -vet, which comes from within a program file. I have many such programs to process and repeatable,... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: skarnm
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Merging multiple lines to columns with awk, while inserting commas for missing lines

Hello all, I have a large csv file where there are four types of rows I need to merge into one row per person, where there is a column for each possible code / type of row, even if that code/row isn't there for that person. In the csv, a person may be listed from one to four times... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: RalphNY
9 Replies
PERLTRAP(1)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					       PERLTRAP(1)

NAME
perltrap - Perl traps for the unwary DESCRIPTION
The biggest trap of all is forgetting to "use warnings" or use the -w switch; see perllexwarn and perlrun. The second biggest trap is not making your entire program runnable under "use strict". The third biggest trap is not reading the list of changes in this version of Perl; see perldelta. Awk Traps Accustomed awk users should take special note of the following: o A Perl program executes only once, not once for each input line. You can do an implicit loop with "-n" or "-p". o The English module, loaded via use English; allows you to refer to special variables (like $/) with names (like $RS), as though they were in awk; see perlvar for details. o Semicolons are required after all simple statements in Perl (except at the end of a block). Newline is not a statement delimiter. o Curly brackets are required on "if"s and "while"s. o Variables begin with "$", "@" or "%" in Perl. o Arrays index from 0. Likewise string positions in substr() and index(). o You have to decide whether your array has numeric or string indices. o Hash values do not spring into existence upon mere reference. o You have to decide whether you want to use string or numeric comparisons. o Reading an input line does not split it for you. You get to split it to an array yourself. And the split() operator has different arguments than awk's. o The current input line is normally in $_, not $0. It generally does not have the newline stripped. ($0 is the name of the program executed.) See perlvar. o $<digit> does not refer to fields--it refers to substrings matched by the last match pattern. o The print() statement does not add field and record separators unless you set $, and "$". You can set $OFS and $ORS if you're using the English module. o You must open your files before you print to them. o The range operator is "..", not comma. The comma operator works as in C. o The match operator is "=~", not "~". ("~" is the one's complement operator, as in C.) o The exponentiation operator is "**", not "^". "^" is the XOR operator, as in C. (You know, one could get the feeling that awk is basically incompatible with C.) o The concatenation operator is ".", not the null string. (Using the null string would render "/pat/ /pat/" unparsable, because the third slash would be interpreted as a division operator--the tokenizer is in fact slightly context sensitive for operators like "/", "?", and ">". And in fact, "." itself can be the beginning of a number.) o The "next", "exit", and "continue" keywords work differently. o The following variables work differently: Awk Perl ARGC scalar @ARGV (compare with $#ARGV) ARGV[0] $0 FILENAME $ARGV FNR $. - something FS (whatever you like) NF $#Fld, or some such NR $. OFMT $# OFS $, ORS $ RLENGTH length($&) RS $/ RSTART length($`) SUBSEP $; o You cannot set $RS to a pattern, only a string. o When in doubt, run the awk construct through a2p and see what it gives you. C/C++ Traps Cerebral C and C++ programmers should take note of the following: o Curly brackets are required on "if"'s and "while"'s. o You must use "elsif" rather than "else if". o The "break" and "continue" keywords from C become in Perl "last" and "next", respectively. Unlike in C, these do not work within a "do { } while" construct. See "Loop Control" in perlsyn. o The switch statement is called "given/when" and only available in perl 5.10 or newer. See "Switch Statements" in perlsyn. o Variables begin with "$", "@" or "%" in Perl. o Comments begin with "#", not "/*" or "//". Perl may interpret C/C++ comments as division operators, unterminated regular expressions or the defined-or operator. o You can't take the address of anything, although a similar operator in Perl is the backslash, which creates a reference. o "ARGV" must be capitalized. $ARGV[0] is C's "argv[1]", and "argv[0]" ends up in $0. o System calls such as link(), unlink(), rename(), etc. return nonzero for success, not 0. (system(), however, returns zero for success.) o Signal handlers deal with signal names, not numbers. Use "kill -l" to find their names on your system. Sed Traps Seasoned sed programmers should take note of the following: o A Perl program executes only once, not once for each input line. You can do an implicit loop with "-n" or "-p". o Backreferences in substitutions use "$" rather than "". o The pattern matching metacharacters "(", ")", and "|" do not have backslashes in front. o The range operator is "...", rather than comma. Shell Traps Sharp shell programmers should take note of the following: o The backtick operator does variable interpolation without regard to the presence of single quotes in the command. o The backtick operator does no translation of the return value, unlike csh. o Shells (especially csh) do several levels of substitution on each command line. Perl does substitution in only certain constructs such as double quotes, backticks, angle brackets, and search patterns. o Shells interpret scripts a little bit at a time. Perl compiles the entire program before executing it (except for "BEGIN" blocks, which execute at compile time). o The arguments are available via @ARGV, not $1, $2, etc. o The environment is not automatically made available as separate scalar variables. o The shell's "test" uses "=", "!=", "<" etc for string comparisons and "-eq", "-ne", "-lt" etc for numeric comparisons. This is the reverse of Perl, which uses "eq", "ne", "lt" for string comparisons, and "==", "!=" "<" etc for numeric comparisons. Perl Traps Practicing Perl Programmers should take note of the following: o Remember that many operations behave differently in a list context than they do in a scalar one. See perldata for details. o Avoid barewords if you can, especially all lowercase ones. You can't tell by just looking at it whether a bareword is a function or a string. By using quotes on strings and parentheses on function calls, you won't ever get them confused. o You cannot discern from mere inspection which builtins are unary operators (like chop() and chdir()) and which are list operators (like print() and unlink()). (Unless prototyped, user-defined subroutines can only be list operators, never unary ones.) See perlop and perlsub. o People have a hard time remembering that some functions default to $_, or @ARGV, or whatever, but that others which you might expect to do not. o The <FH> construct is not the name of the filehandle, it is a readline operation on that handle. The data read is assigned to $_ only if the file read is the sole condition in a while loop: while (<FH>) { } while (defined($_ = <FH>)) { }.. <FH>; # data discarded! o Remember not to use "=" when you need "=~"; these two constructs are quite different: $x = /foo/; $x =~ /foo/; o The "do {}" construct isn't a real loop that you can use loop control on. o Use "my()" for local variables whenever you can get away with it (but see perlform for where you can't). Using "local()" actually gives a local value to a global variable, which leaves you open to unforeseen side-effects of dynamic scoping. o If you localize an exported variable in a module, its exported value will not change. The local name becomes an alias to a new value but the external name is still an alias for the original. As always, if any of these are ever officially declared as bugs, they'll be fixed and removed. perl v5.18.2 2014-01-06 PERLTRAP(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:17 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy