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Full Discussion: Sort Command
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Sort Command Post 44624 by google on Tuesday 9th of December 2003 07:27:27 AM
Old 12-09-2003
from the man pages
man sort

+POS1 [-POS2]
Specify a field within each line to use as a sort-
ing key. The field consists of the portion of the
line starting at POS1 and up to (but not including)
POS2 (or to the end of the line if POS2 is not
given). The fields and character positions are
numbered starting with 0.

-k POS1[,POS2]
An alternate syntax for specifying sorting keys.
The fields and character positions are numbered
starting with 1.

A position has the form f.c, where f is the number of the
field to use and c is the number of the first character
from the beginning of the field (for +pos) or from the end
of the previous field (for -pos). The .c part of a posi-
tion may be omitted in which case it is taken to be the
first character in the field. If the -b option has been
given, the .c part of a field specification is counted
from the first nonblank character of the field (for +pos)
or from the first nonblank character following the previ-
ous field (for -pos).

A +pos or -pos argument may also have any of the option
letters Mbdfinr appended to it, in which case the global
ordering options are not used for that particular field.
The -b option may be independently attached to either or
both of the +pos and -pos parts of a field specification,
and if it is inherited from the global options it will be
attached to both. If a -n or -M option is used, thus
implying a -b option, the -b option is taken to apply to
both the +pos and the -pos parts of a key specification.
Keys may span multiple fields.
 

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JAY(1)							      General Commands Manual							    JAY(1)

NAME
jay - an LALR(1) parser generator for Java and C# SYNOPSIS
jay [ -tv ] [ -c ] [ -p ] [ -b file_prefix ] [ -V yyValue ] filename < skeleton DESCRIPTION
Jay reads the grammar specification in the file filename and generates an LR(1) parser for it. The parsers consist of a set of LALR(1) parsing tables and a driver routine from the file skeleton written in the Java programming language. Jay writes the parse tables and the driver routine to standard output. The following options are available: -b file_prefix The -b option changes the prefix prepended to the output file names to the string denoted by file_prefix. The default prefix is the character y. -c The -c option makes jay generate C# code instead of the default Java. -t The -t option arranges for debugging information to be incorporated in the compiled code. -v The -v option causes a human-readable description of the generated parser to be written to the file y.output. -p The -p option causes jay to print the directory in which its sample skeleton files are installed. If a project wants to use the default skeleton file included with jay, it can use this option in a makefile to find the path to the skeleton or skele- ton.cs file included with the jay distribution. If the environment variable TMPDIR is set, the string denoted by TMPDIR will be used as the name of the directory where the temporary files are created. FILES
skeleton y.output /tmp/yacc.aXXXXXX /tmp/yacc.tXXXXXX /tmp/yacc.uXXXXXX DIAGNOSTICS
If there are rules that are never reduced, the number of such rules is reported on standard error. If there are any LALR(1) conflicts, the number of conflicts is reported on standard error. HISTORY
Jay is derived from Berkeley yacc . Input conventions closely follow those of yacc ; for details, consult the parser skeleton file and the commented example included with the sources. 4.3 Berkeley Distribution May 24, 1993 / July 8, 1998 JAY(1)
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