04-17-2020
Thanks for all your replies. I got sorted it out.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I know this seems like a stupid question.
I am trying to sort an address book. Some peole have first, middle and last names, some only have first and last names.
Eg:
Bob Hope
John Bon Jovi
etc ..
I want to sort this by last name.
I was thinking of using something like sort -k $variable... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kevin80
5 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I have 1 million records and want to extract lines betwen 10000 -20000 and put it in another file.
Could you please suggest a command for this.
Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: unxusr123
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
How can i write a script.?
which lists all X process and gets the start minute of each of them.
thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Anteus
1 Replies
4. Solaris
Is there any way to find "Number of files" that exists on my solaris parition in the starting of 2009 year ?
I know ctime or mtime will not help and unix wouldnt store creation time.
Only hope i can see ( and i am not sure if that will help ) is that my system is up from last 2 years without... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajwinder
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file with contents similar to this.
abcd
1234
4567
7666
jdjdjd
89289
9382
92
jksdj
9823
298
I want to write a shell script which count the number of lines that start with the number (disregard the lines starting with alphabets) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: grajp002
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I want to do the following:
Extract some lines from different files and copy them into one file, with the first column being the line number. I do this with
cat file1 file2 file3 |grep 'xxx' |nl > output.file
Works fine. But if I want to add data of interest from a fourth file to the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: paracetamol
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello all! I am writing a script that takes in a directory name as input and if the directory exists, it shows the files inside the directory
here is what I have so far (incomplete) (mostly like pseudocode)
#/bin/sh
echo Please enter the name of a directory
read dir
grep $dir... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: subway69
2 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello community,
I created a script to simply query DB and then analize data. The environment where the script will works is two RedHat machines that access both to an external database. My script runs from the first crontab node. But what about if the first node goes down?
What I need is copy... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Power User,
I'm trying to compute this kind of text file format:
file1:
jakarta 100 150
jakarta 170 210
beijing 220 250
beijing 260 280
beijing 290 320
new_york 330 350
new_york 370 420
tokyo 430 470
tokyo 480 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anjas
2 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello there,
I'm using a read-while loop to preserve the word Failed within a text file. For example, if the word Failed exist twice in a single text file, my STDOUT should re-direct to a new text file and display Failed twice.
My output is attached to this thread. I would like output to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: SysAdminRialto
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cz::sort
Cz::Sort(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Cz::Sort(3pm)
NAME
Cz::Sort - Czech sort
SYNOPSIS
use Cz::Sort;
my $result = czcmp("_x j&a", "_&p");
my @sorted = czsort qw(plachta plaoka Planieka planieka plani);
print "@sorted
";
DESCRIPTION
Implements czech sorting conventions, indepentent on current locales in effect, which are often bad. Does the four-pass sort. The idea and
the base of the conversion table comes from Petr Olsak's program csr and the code is as compliant with CSN 97 6030 as possible.
The basic function provided by this module, is czcmp. If compares two scalars and returns the (-1, 0, 1) result. The function can be called
directly, like
my $result = czcmp("_x j&a", "_&p");
But for convenience and also because of compatibility with older versions, there is a function czsort. It works on list of strings and
returns that list, hmm, sorted. The function is defined simply like
sub czsort
{ sort { czcmp($a, $b); } @_; }
standard use of user's function in sort. Hashes would be simply sorted
@sorted = sort { czcmp($hash{$a}, $hash{$b}) }
keys %hash;
Both czcmp and czsort are exported into caller's namespace by default, as well as cscmp and cssort that are just aliases.
This module comes with encoding table prepared for ISO-8859-2 (Latin-2) encoding. If your data come in different one, you might want to
check the module Cstocs which can be used for reencoding of the list's data prior to calling czsort, or reencode this module to fit your
needs.
VERSION
0.68
SEE ALSO
perl(1), Cz::Cstocs(3).
AUTHOR
(c) 1997--2000 Jan Pazdziora <adelton@fi.muni.cz>, http://www.fi.muni.cz/~adelton/
at Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University, Brno
perl v5.10.1 2000-05-16 Cz::Sort(3pm)