Need to find only unique values for a given tag across the files:
For eg:
Test1:
<Tag1>aaa</Tag1>
<Tag2>bbb</Tag2>
<Tag3>ccc</Tag3>
Test2:
<Tag1>aaa</Tag1>
<Tag2>ddd</Tag2>
<Tag3>eee</Tag3>
Test3:
<Tag1>aaa</Tag1>
<Tag2>ddd</Tag2>
<Tag3>eee</Tag3>
Test4: (8 Replies)
Hi all,
I have got a problem while comparing 2 text files and the result should contains the unique values(Non repeatable).
For eg:
file1.txt
1
2
3
4
file2.txt
2
3
So after comaping the above 2 files I should get only 1 and 4 as the output. Pls help me out. (7 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I'm just wondering how could I using awk language merge two files by comparison of one their row.
I mean, I have one file like this:
file#1:
21/07/2009 11:45:00 100.0000000 27.2727280
21/07/2009 11:50:00 75.9856644 25.2492676
21/07/2009 11:55:00 51.9713287 23.2258072... (4 Replies)
Hi, this is about sorting a very large file (like 10 gb) to keep lines with unique entries across SOME of the columns.
The line originally looked like this:
sort -u -k2,2 -k3,3n -k4,4n -k5,5n -k6,6n file_unsorted > file_sorted
please note the -u flag.
The problem is that this single... (4 Replies)
Hi. I am not sure the title gives an optimal description of what I want to do.
I have several text files that contain data in many columns. All the files are organized the same way, but the data in the columns might differ. I want to count the number of times data occur in specific columns,... (0 Replies)
Good morning all,
I have a problem that is one step beyond a standard awk compare.
I would like to compare three files which have several thousand records against a fourth file. All of them have a value in each row that is identical, and one value in each of those rows which may be duplicated... (1 Reply)
Looking for a little help here.
I have 1000's of text files within a multiple folders.
YYYY/
/MM
/1000's Files
Eg.
2014/01/1000 files
2014/02/1237 files
2014/03/1400 files
There are folders for each year and each month, and within each monthly folder there are... (4 Replies)
I have one script as below:
#!/bin/ksh
Outputfile1="/home/OutputFile1.xls"
Outputfile2="/home/OutputFile2.xls"
InputFile1="/home/InputFile1.sql"
InputFile2="/home/InputFile2.sql"
echo "Select hobby, class, subject, sports, rollNumber from Student_Table" >> InputFile1
echo "Select rollNumber... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sharma331
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mustache
MUSTACHE(1) Mustache Manual MUSTACHE(1)NAME
mustache -- Mustache processor
SYNOPSIS
mustache <YAML> <FILE>
mustache --compile <FILE>
mustache --tokens <FILE>
DESCRIPTION
Mustache is a logic-less templating system for HTML, config files, anything.
The mustache command processes a Mustache template preceded by YAML frontmatter from standard input and prints one or more documents to
standard output.
YAML frontmatter beings with --- on a single line, followed by YAML, ending with another --- on a single line, e.g.
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
If you are unfamiliar with YAML, it is a superset of JSON. Valid JSON should work fine.
After the frontmatter should come any valid Mustache template. See mustache(5) for an overview of Mustache templates.
For example:
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
Now let's combine them.
$ cat data.yml
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
$ cat template.mustache
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
If you provide multiple YAML documents (as delimited by ---), your template will be rendered multiple times. Like a mail merge.
For example:
$ cat data.yml
---
name: chris
---
name: mark
---
name: scott
---
$ cat template.mustache
Hi {{name}}!
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
OPTIONS
By default mustache will try to render a Mustache template using the YAML frontmatter you provide. It can do a few other things, however.
-c, --compile
Print the compiled Ruby version of a given template. This is the code that is actually used when rendering a template into a string.
Useful for debugging but only if you are familiar with Mustache's internals.
-t, --tokens
Print the tokenized form of a given Mustache template. This can be used to understand how Mustache parses a template. The tokens are
handed to a generator which compiles them into a Ruby string. Syntax errors and confused tags, therefor, can probably be identified
by examining the tokens produced.
INSTALLATION
If you have RubyGems installed:
gem install mustache
EXAMPLES
$ mustache data.yml template.mustache
$ cat data.yml | mustache - template.mustache
$ mustache -c template.mustache
$ cat <<data | ruby mustache - template.mustache
---
name: Bob
age: 30
---
data
COPYRIGHT
Mustache is Copyright (C) 2009 Chris Wanstrath
Original CTemplate by Google
SEE ALSO mustache(5), mustache(7), gem(1), http://mustache.github.com/
DEFUNKT May 2010 MUSTACHE(1)