Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: join two lines together
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting join two lines together Post 44943 by Perderabo on Friday 12th of December 2003 11:34:00 AM
Old 12-12-2003
sed 'N;s/\n/\;/' < inputfile > outputfile
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Join Every 5 Lines With $ Symbol

Hi All, I have output like this in one file. IFName: aust00m1.mis.amat.com ] ObjID: 5eceea48-0d59-71dd-1512-9887a1f10000 IFAlias: Dest: AMNA austkchr1-ser0/0/0:0.315 Type: FRASI CID: DHEC.559128 IFDescription: ATM9/1/0.315-atm subif Status: Normal IFName: aust00m1.mis.amat.com ] ObjID:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ntgobinath
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to join lines

can anyone tell me as "how to join all lines in a file " using a shell script Actually i have many files in a directory and for each file i want to join all the lines using a shell scrip . Thanks in advance!!! (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: glamo_2312
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

join lines

input1 x x input2 y x x z join input1 input2>>output ouput x x (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: repinementer
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Join the lines

Hi All, Currently, the output looks like this: hdisk0 queue_depth:3 hdisk1 queue_depth:3 hdisk2 queue_depth:1 hdisk3 queue_depth:1 I need to change the format to look like this: hdisk0 queue_depth:3 hdisk1 queue_depth:3 hdisk2 queue_depth:1 (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Beginer0705
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

join 2 lines

hi all i have sample and i need script to do this /dev/xxx oracle test /dev/sap 9999 000 88 99 i need the out put like this /dev/xxx oracle test /dev/sap 9999 000 88 99 can any one provide me with an idea to solve this problem (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: maxim42
8 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

join two lines

I want to join this two lines but only when after him I have nothing or a comma Yes, I know Jonesy, and I'll give him about one more minute. this two lines must become Yes, I know Jonesy, and I'll give him about one more minute. thank you very much (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: thailand
11 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

join lines in file

I have a file like this: --------------------------------------------------------------- 26 00:04:48,440 --> 00:04:51,440 I don't know why he can't just do the Great Apache Flaming Arrow Act. 27 00:04:52,440 --> 00:04:54,839 Didn't you tell him to use the gopher snake? 28... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thailand
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Join multiple lines

Hi I have a source file ( written i C ) where a funtion call is spread over multiple lines, for example : func( a, b, c ); I want this to be joined into one single line : func(a,b,c); How can this be done with awk and sed ? Regards. Hench (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hench
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Join lines in a file????

Hello UNIX gurus, I am new to the world of UNIX. Hopefully I am submitting my question at the right forum. Here is my dilemma - I have a file with contents like this - "line1","Hello","World","Today is a wonderful day","yes it is" "line2","Hello","World","Today is a beautiful day","oh... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: foolishbar
8 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Join Lines

Hi how do I join files like below in script. Thanks, Ashan there are may line like this in the file. zone name DR_TMP_A_sev1_3eA vsan 200 pwwn 50:00:09:73:f0:16:35:08 pwwn c0:50:76:08:6e:dc:00:16 zone name DR_TMP_A_SVR2_3eA vsan 200 pwwn 50:00:09:73:f0:16:35:08 pwwn... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashanabey
4 Replies
BZZ(1)								   DjVuLibre-3.5							    BZZ(1)

NAME
bzz - DjVu general purpose compression utility. SYNOPSIS
Encoding: bzz -e[blocksize] inputfile outputfile Decoding: bzz -d inputfile outputfile DESCRIPTION
The first form of the command line (option -e) compresses the data from file inputfile and writes the compressed data into outputfile. The second form of the command line (option -d) decompressed file inputfile and writes the output to outputfile. OPTIONS
-d Decoding mode. -e[blocksize] Encoding mode. The optional argument blocksize specifies the size of the input file blocks processed by the Burrows-Wheeler trans- form expressed in kilobytes. The default block sizes is 2048 KB. The maximal block size is 4096 KB. Specifying a larger block size usually produces higher compression ratios and increases the memory requirements of both the encoder and decoder. It is use- less to specify a block size that is larger than the input file. ALGORITHMS
The Burrows-Wheeler transform is performed using a combination of the Karp-Miller-Rosenberg and the Bentley-Sedgewick algorithms. This is comparable to (Sadakane, DCC 98) with a slightly more flexible ranking scheme. Symbols are then ordered according to a running estimate of their occurrence frequencies. The symbol ranks are then coded using a simple fixed tree and the ZP binary adaptive coder (Bottou, DCC 98). The Burrows-Wheeler transform is also used in the well known compressor bzip2. The originality of bzz is the use of the ZP adaptive coder. The adaptation noise can cost up to 5 percent in file size, but this penalty is usually offset by the benefits of adaptation. PERFORMANCE
The following table shows comparative results (in bits per character) on the Canterbury Corpus ( http://corpus.canterbury.ac.nz ). The very good bzz performance on the spreadsheet file excl puts the weighted average ahead of much more sophisticated compressors such as fsmx. +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Compression performance | | text fax csrc excl sprc tech poem html lisp man play Weighted Average | +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | compress 3.27 0.97 3.56 2.41 4.21 3.06 3.38 3.68 3.90 4.43 3.51 2.55 3.31 | | gzip -9 2.85 0.82 2.24 1.63 2.67 2.71 3.23 2.59 2.65 3.31 3.12 2.08 2.53 | | bzip2 -9 2.27 0.78 2.18 1.01 2.70 2.02 2.42 2.48 2.79 3.33 2.53 1.54 2.23 | | ppmd 2.31 0.99 2.11 1.08 2.68 2.19 2.48 2.38 2.43 3.00 2.53 1.65 2.20 | | fsmx 2.10 0.79 1.89 1.48 2.52 1.84 2.21 2.24 2.29 2.91 2.35 1.63 2.06 | | bzz 2.25 0.76 2.13 0.78 2.67 2.00 2.40 2.52 2.60 3.19 2.52 1.44 2.16 | +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ Note that DjVu contributors have several entries in this table. Program compress was written some time ago by Joe Orost. Program ppmd is an improvement of the PPM-C method invented by Paul Howard. CREDITS
Program bzz was written by Leon Bottou <leonb@users.sourceforge.net> and was then improved by Andrei Erofeev <andrew_erofeev@yahoo.com>, Bill Riemers <docbill@sourceforge.net> and many others. SEE ALSO
djvu(1), compress(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1) DjVuLibre-3.5 10/11/2001 BZZ(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:50 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy