Could you please try following.
Output will be as follows. EDIT: After reading your question again, 1 question came. Is it you want to check $2 also from Input_file2 to Input_file1 comparison vice?
Thanks,
R. Singh
Last edited by RavinderSingh13; 11-17-2019 at 02:25 AM..
This User Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
Hello all,
Would appreciate if someone can help me out on the following requirement.
INPUT FILE:
--------------------------
TPS REPORT
abc def ghi
jkl mon pqr
stu vrs lll
END OF TPS REPORT
TPS REPORT
field1 field2 field3
field4 field5 field6 (8 Replies)
Hello!
I am writing a program to run through two large lists of data (~300,000 rows), find where rows in one file match another, and combine them based on matching fields. Due to the large file sizes, I'm guessing AWK will be the most efficient way to do this. Overall, the input and output I'm... (5 Replies)
Hi every one;
I have a 31500-line text file upon which two following tasks are to be performed:
1: Rearranging the file
2: Taking the average of each column (considering number of zeros) and output the result into a new file
This is the code I've come up with:
awk '(NR%3150<3150)... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I'm very new to these forums. I was wondering if someone could help an AWK beginner with a pattern matching
an actor to his appearance in movies, which would be stored as records. Let's say we have a database of 4 movies (each movie a record with name, studio + year, and actor fields with... (2 Replies)
Hi,
input:
AA|BB|CC
DD|EE
FF
what I am trying to get:
AA|BB|CC
DD|EE|
FF||
I tried to create first an UDF for printing repeats, but I think I have an issue with my END section or my array:
function repeat(str, n, rep, i)
{
for(i=1 ;i<n;i++)
rep=rep str
return rep
}
... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have 2 tab-delimited input files as follows.
file1.tab:
green A apple
red B apple
file2.tab:
apple - A;Z
Objective:
Return $1 of file1 if,
. $1 of file2 matches $3 of file1 and,
. any single element (separated by ";") in $3 of file2 is present in $2 of file1
In order to... (3 Replies)
Trying to use awk to match the contents of each line in file1 with $5 in file2. Both files are tab-delimited and there may be a space or special character in the name being matched in file2, for example in file1 the name is BRCA1 but in file2 the name is BRCA 1 or in file1 name is BCR but in file2... (6 Replies)
I apologize in advance, but I continue to have trouble searching for matches between two files and then printing portions of each to output in awk and would very much appreciate some help.
I have data as follows:
File1
PS012,002 PRQ 0 1 1 17 1 0 -1 3 2 1 2 -1 ... (7 Replies)
In two previous posts (here) and (here), I received help from forum members comparing multiple fields across two files and selectively printing portions of each as output based upon would-be matches using awk. I had been fairly comfortable populating awk arrays with fields and using awk's special... (3 Replies)
Hi,
My input looks like that:
A|123|qwer
A|456|tyui
A|456|wsxe
B|789|dfgh
Using awk, I am trying to get:
A|123;456|qwer;tyui;wsxe
B|789|dfgh
For records with same $1, group all the $2 in a field (without replicates), and all the $3 in a field (without replicates).
What I have tried:... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: beca123456
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
px_get_record2
PX_GET_RECORD2(3) Library Functions Manual PX_GET_RECORD2(3)NAME
PX_get_record2 -- Returns record in Paradox file
SYNOPSIS
#include <paradox.h>
int PX_get_record2(pxdoc_t *pxdoc, int recno, char *data, int *deleted, pxdatablockinfo_t *pxdbinfo)
DESCRIPTION
This function is similar to PX_get_record(3) but takes two extra parameters. If *deleted is set to 1 the function will consider any record
in the database, even those which are deleted. If *pxdbinfo is not NULL, the function will return some information about the data block
where the record has been read from. You will have to allocate memory for pxdbinfo before calling PX_get_record2.
On return *deleted will be set to 1 if the requested record is deleted or 0 if it is not deleted. The struct pxdatablockinfo_t has the fol-
lowing fields:
blockpos (long)
File positon where the block starts. The first six bytes of the block contain the header, followed by the record data.
recordpos (long)
File position where the requested record starts.
size (int)
Size of the data block without the six bytes for the header.
recno (int)
Record number within the data block. The first record in the block has number 0.
numrecords (int)
The number of records in this block.
number (int)
The number of the data block.
This function may return records with invalid data, because records are not explizitly marked as deleted, but rather the size of a valid
data block is modified. A data block is a fixed size area in the file which holds a certain number of records. If for some reason a data
block has newer been completely filled with records, the algorithmn anticipates deleted records in this data block, which are not there.
This often happens with the last data block in a file, which is likely to not being fully filled with records.
If you accessing several records, do it in ascending order, because this is the most efficient way.
Note:
This function is deprecated. Use PX_retrieve_record(3) instead
RETURN VALUE
Returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
SEE ALSO PX_get_field(3), PX_get_record(3)AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Uwe Steinmann uwe@steinmann.cx.
PX_GET_RECORD2(3)