I have a solution, but it seems labored. I would like to compare strings return a value in percent out of 100.
Such as:
i.e., 'abc' is 300% longer than 'a'
For beginners: s1=${#text1} will return the length of $text1. In this case it would return '1' because it is one character long ('a').
I've looked at the man pages for 'diff' and some others and haven't figured out an easy way that this could be done in a more simple manner; yet, something tells me I'm missing something. I'm repeating the formulas, and I'm wondering if there is perhaps some way to do an inverse of a result... Anyways, it seems redundant.
I need to compare two files with exactly same length as example: -
File1 contain 500 records with length of 640 chars of each line.
File2 contain 1500 records with length of 640 chars of each line.
I need get an output to be written in File3 which will contain 1000 records difference.
but... (4 Replies)
Need a script that manipulates a fixed length file that will compare 2 fields in that file and if they are equal write that line to a new file.
i.e. If fields 87-93 = fields 119-125, then write the entire line to a new file. Do this for every line in the file. After we get only the fields... (1 Reply)
I have two very large datasets (>100MB) in a simple vertical list format. They are of different size and with different order and formatting (e.g. whitespace and some other minor cruft that would thwart easy regex).
Let's call them set1 and set2.
I want to check set2 to see if it contains... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone help with a effective solution ?
I need to change a variable length text field (between 1 - 18 characters) to a fixed length text of 18 characters with the unused portion, at the end, filled with spaces.
The text field is actually field 10 of a .csv file however I could cut... (7 Replies)
Hello,
Is there anyway that I can align a pipe delimited text file by the maxium field length where the field is separated out by pipes for large text files with more than
100,000 rows?
So, far I have searched other forums and google about aligning text files in unix and I have noticed that... (7 Replies)
I am trying to get text from a webpage, in terminal form. So far I am:
1. getting the html for the page printed using curl (curl -s webpage.com), which is then
2. piped to awk, printing line number 29 (awk NR==29), then
3. this is where I am sort of lost. I know where in the printed line I... (7 Replies)
The awk below using the sample input would output the following: Basically, it averages the text in $5 that matches if $7 < 30 .
awk '{if(len==0){last=$5;total=$7;len=1;getline}if($5!=last){printf("%s\t%f\n", last,... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I want to compare strings length to a number but i am getting error. I want first name should be length of 8.
Please help.
#bin !/bin/bash
clear
echo -n "Enter name "
read name
IFS=_
ary=($name)
for key in "${!ary}"; do echo "$key${ary}"; done
##First name should be equal to 8... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have a text file with sample records as
CASE ID: 20170218881083
Original presentment record for ARN not found
for Re-presentment
I want to extract the 23 digit number from this file. I thought of using grep but initially couldn't extract the required number. However, after... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: dsid
16 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
wc
wc(1) General Commands Manual wc(1)NAME
wc - Counts the lines, words, characters, and bytes in a file
SYNOPSIS
wc [-c | -m] [-lw] [file...]
The wc command counts the lines, words, and characters or bytes in a file, or in the standard input if you do not specify any files, and
writes the results to standard output. It also keeps a total count for all named files.
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
wc: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
Counts bytes in the input. Counts lines in the input. Counts characters in the input. Counts words in the input.
OPERANDS
Specifies the pathname of the input file. If this operand is omitted, standard input is used.
DESCRIPTION
A word is defined as a string of characters delimited by white space as defined in the X/Open Base Definitions for XCU4.
The wc command counts lines, words, and bytes by default. Use the appropriate options to limit wc output. Specifying wc without options
is the equivalent of specifying wc -lwc. If any options are specified, only the requested information is output.
The order in which counts appear in the output line is lines, words, bytes. If an option is omitted, then the corresponding field in the
output is omitted. If the -m option is used, then character counts replace byte counts.
When you specify one or more files, wc displays the names of the files along with the counts. If standard input is used, then no file name
is displayed.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: Successful completion. An error occurred.
EXAMPLES
To display the number of lines, words, and bytes in the file text, enter: wc text
This results in the following output: 27 185 722 text
The numbers 27, 185, and 722 are the number of lines, words, and bytes, respectively, in the file text. To display only one or two
of the three counts include the appropriate options. For example, the following command displays only line and byte counts: wc -cl
text
27 722 text To count lines, words, and bytes in more than one file, use wc with more than one input file or with a file name pat-
tern. For example, the following command can be issued in a directory containing the files text, text1, and text2: wc -l text*
27 text 112 text1 5 text2 144 total
The numbers 27, 112, and 5 are the numbers of lines in the files text, text1, and text2, respectively, and 144 is the total number
of lines in the three files. The file name is always appended to the output. To obtain a pure number for things like reporting
purposes, pipe all input to the wc command using cat. For example, the following command will report the total count of characters
in all files in a directory. echo There are `cat *.c | wc -c` characters in *.c files
There are 1869 characters in *.c files
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the execution of wc: Provides a default value for the internationalization variables that are
unset or null. If LANG is unset or null, the corresponding value from the default locale is used. If any of the internationalization vari-
ables contain an invalid setting, the utility behaves as if none of the variables had been defined. If set to a non-empty string value,
overrides the values of all the other internationalization variables. Determines the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes
of text data as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multibyte characters in arguments and input files) and which characters
are defined as white space characters. Determines the locale for the format and contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error
and informative messages written to standard output. Determines the location of message catalogues for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.
SEE ALSO
Commands: cksum(1), ls(1)
Standards: standards(5)wc(1)