You would need to compare $5 and $6 to all the ranges in $2, $3 so you would need to put them in memory first, so a way to do it would be to read the inputfile twice, the first time to put $2, $3 in memory, the second time to compare $5 and $6 to the ranges.
A simple first approach, assuming that $1 is always he same value could look something like this:
With your data this should produce:
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 01-03-2020 at 06:31 AM..
This User Gave Thanks to Scrutinizer For This Post:
I want to print between the range two patterns if a particular pattern is present in between the two patterns. I am new to Unix. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
e.g.
Pattern1
Bombay
Calcutta
Delhi
Pattern2
Pattern1
Patna
Madras
Gwalior
Delhi
Pattern2
Pattern1... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone. I'm new to the boards, I hope I can get and possibly give some help through these forums.
I need some help.
I have two CSV files, let's call them File A and File B.
This is the structure for File A:
ID, VAR1, VAR2, VAR3 - VAR50 (where the VAR 1-VAR50 are either 0 or 1)
... (1 Reply)
Hi;
For sure there's an easy answer to this one that I am not finding..
I first set a variable, say
b1a:] max=5
then I want to use max to set the range for a for loop like so (it should run for i in 1:5)
b1a:] for i in {1..$max}; do echo $i; done
{1..5}
I would like the output... (2 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a file lik below: n of row=420, n of letters in each row=100000 like below: there is no space between the letters.
what I want is: the 75000th letter to the 85000th letter in each row.
how to do that? thanks a lot!
... (2 Replies)
The following is part of a larger project and sed is (right now) a given. I am working on a recursive Korn shell function to "peel off" XML tags from a larger text. Just for context i will show the complete function (not working right now) here:
function pGetXML
{
typeset chTag="$1"
typeset... (5 Replies)
hi all,
Say i have a range like 0 - 1000 and i need to split into diffrent files the lines which are within a specific fixed sub-range. I can achieve this manually but is not scalable if the range increase.
E.g
cat file1.txt
Response time 2 ms
Response time 15 ms
Response time 101... (12 Replies)
Hi. I have a large data file. the first column has unique identifiers. I have approximately 5 of these files and they have varying number of columns in their rows. I need to extract ~300 of the rows in to a separate file. I'm not looking for something that would do all 5 files at once, but... (7 Replies)
I have files being generated in format A20140326.00........ to A20140326.24.............
I need to copy these hourly basis from one location to another.
Eg. If i copy from 14 to 19 the hour, I use wildcard as A201403226.1*.
Requirement is : I need to copy from 06 hour and wil run the script... (1 Reply)
In my Linux system ephemeral port range is showing different ranges as follows
$ cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
32768 61000
cat /etc/sysctl.conf | grep net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range
net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 9000 65500
Which will be the effective ephemeral port... (5 Replies)
PPI::Token::Quote(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation PPI::Token::Quote(3pm)NAME
PPI::Token::Quote - String quote abstract base class
INHERITANCE
PPI::Token::Quote
isa PPI::Token
isa PPI::Element
DESCRIPTION
The "PPI::Token::Quote" class is never instantiated, and simply provides a common abstract base class for the four quote classes. In PPI,
a "quote" is limited to only the quote-like things that themselves directly represent a string. (although this includes double quotes with
interpolated elements inside them).
The subclasses of "PPI::Token::Quote" are:
'' - PPI::Token::Quote::Single
"q{}" - PPI::Token::Quote::Literal
"" - PPI::Token::Quote::Double
"qq{}" - PPI::Token::Quote::Interpolate
The names are hopefully obvious enough not to have to explain what each class is here. See their respective pages for more details.
Please note that although the here-doc does represent a literal string, it is such a nasty piece of work that in PPI it is given the honor
of its own token class (PPI::Token::HereDoc).
METHODS
string
The "string" method is provided by all four ::Quote classes. It won't get you the actual literal Perl value, but it will strip off the
wrapping of the quotes.
# The following all return foo from the ->string method
'foo'
"foo"
q{foo}
qq <foo>
literal
The "literal" method is provided by ::Quote:Literal and ::Quote::Single. This returns the value of the string as Perl sees it: without the
quote marks and with "\" and "'" resolved to "" and "'".
The "literal" method is not implemented by ::Quote::Double or ::Quote::Interpolate yet.
SUPPORT
See the support section in the main module.
AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 - 2011 Adam Kennedy.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
perl v5.10.1 2011-02-26 PPI::Token::Quote(3pm)