RudiC, don't misunderstand me, when I wrote "asap" I didn't want to speed up people to reply, just to say that I have a problem to solve By the way, I solved the mistery, and you're right RudiC, my input has quirks, maybe because is coming from telnet, so I fixed it with:
Thank you all for collaboration, and for the many examples provided!!!
Lucas
Last edited by Lord Spectre; 01-18-2020 at 03:57 PM..
Hello,
I am wondering if you can assist with my question and ask kindly for this.
I have a number of files that are listed as file1.gz through file100.gz.
I am trying to perform a grep on the files and find a specific date that only resides within within one of the files. There are... (3 Replies)
am using txr command (txr 1097) on a process that generates the following output. Im trying to extract the 13th field from the highlighted string. it is delimited by '?'. The 13th field corresponds to the '0' (in bold). can you let me know how I can extract the 13 th field please?
... (1 Reply)
am using txr command (txr 1097) on a process that generates the following output. Im trying to extract the 13th field from the highlighted string. it is delimited by '?'. The 13th field corresponds to the '0' (in bold). can you let me know how I can extract the 13 th field please?
... (1 Reply)
Hi Everyone,
New to the forum, and have my first question.
I have the following Macro currently being used within Telnet to run a report for the date being entered. However, now I need the Macro to input the day after today to the the day after today.
Example: If today is May 9, 2012 - the... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I would need some help, :wall: on a linux script,
I am not sure how can I separate some text file,
Text file contains something similar to this:
share "userhome_e" "/fs1_100g/FILE58/userhome" umask=022 maxusr=4294967295 netbios=FILE58
share "bu share"... (3 Replies)
I need to grab information from the output of the ps command.
For each line of ps output that contains _progres -b I need to get the word that follows -p. The "-p" can be anywhere after "_progres -b".
Using grep to select the correct lines is no problem (e.g. ps -ef|grep "_progres \-b|grep -v... (3 Replies)
My scenario is as follows.
1. I have a reference file with the IP addresses and names
$ cat ref.list
10.11.xxx.xxx AA
10.12.xxx.xxx BB
10.13.xxx.xxx CC
10.14.xxx.xxx DD
2. A script runs and gets me one of the IP addresses and puts it in a separate file, for e.g... (2 Replies)
hi, i have a file A like this:
******************* No 2823 ********************
contig15205-
G383C4U02H4G80+ is in contig15205-
G383C4U02HGLXM- is in contig15205-
G383C4U01C3HIZ+ is in contig15205-
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to extract a specific information from a file which contains more than 200 million records. Attached the input file for your reference.
My file contains information below
... (4 Replies)
Gents,
Using the following code i am able to output the information i need, but some of the strings are not complete due to the separator : used..
Kindly can u help me to get all string after the first :
Example in the output file column 16 i should get
17/11/25 03:43:51:732000
but i... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: jiam912
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
mkfontdir
MKFONTDIR(1) General Commands Manual MKFONTDIR(1)NAME
mkfontdir, fonts.dir, fonts.scale, fonts.alias - create an index of X font files in a directory
SYNOPSIS
mkfontdir [directory-name ... ]
DESCRIPTION
For each directory argument, mkfontdir reads all of the font files in the directory searching for properties named "FONT", or (failing
that) the name of the file stripped of its suffix. These are converted to lower case and used as font names, and, along with the name of
the font file, are written out to the file "fonts.dir" in the directory. The X server and font server use "fonts.dir" to find font files.
The kinds of font files read by mkfontdir depend on configuration parameters, but typically include PCF (suffix ".pcf"), SNF (suffix
".snf") and BDF (suffix ".bdf"). If a font exists in multiple formats, mkfontdir will first choose PCF, then SNF and finally BDF.
The first line of fonts.dir gives the number of fonts in the file. The remaining lines list the fonts themselves, one per line, in two
fields. First is the name of the font file, followed by a space and the name of the font.
SCALABLE FONTS
Because scalable font files do not usually include the X font name, the file "fonts.scale" can be used to name the scalable fonts in the
directory. The fonts listed in it are copied to fonts.dir by mkfontdir. "fonts.scale" has the same format as the "fonts.dir" file.
FONT NAME ALIASES
The file "fonts.alias", which can be put in any directory of the font-path, is used to map new names to existing fonts, and should be
edited by hand. The format is two white-space separated columns, the first containing aliases and the second containing font-name pat-
terns. Lines beginning with "!" are comment lines and are ignored.
If neither the alias nor the value specifies the size fields of the font name, this is a scalable alias. A font name of any size that
matches this alias will be mapped to the same size of the font that the alias resolves to.
When a font alias is used, the name it references is searched for in the normal manner, looking through each font directory in turn. This
means that the aliases need not mention fonts in the same directory as the alias file.
To embed white space in either name, simply enclose it in double-quote marks; to embed double-quote marks (or any other character), precede
them with back-slash:
"magic-alias with spaces" ""font name" with quotes"
regular-alias fixed
If the string "FILE_NAMES_ALIASES" stands alone on a line, each file-name in the directory (stripped of its suffix) will be used as an
alias for that font.
FILES
fonts.dir List of fonts in the directory and the files they are stored in. Created by mkfontdir. Read by the X server and font
server each time the font path is set (see xset(1)).
fonts.scale List of scalable fonts in the directory. Contents are copied to fonts.dir by mkfontdir.
fonts.alias List of font name aliases. Read by the X server and font server each time the font path is set (see xset(1)).
SEE ALSO X(1), Xserver(1), xfs(1), xset(1)X Version 11 Release 6.1 MKFONTDIR(1)