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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers append newline to files with incomplete last line Post 49940 by ziyi on Wednesday 14th of April 2004 04:03:40 AM
Old 04-14-2004
append newline to files with incomplete last line

Hi all,

Is there any way I can check a file for the linefeed character at the end of the file, and append one only if it is missing (ie. Incomplete last line)?

Need to do this because I need to write a script to process files FTP-ed over from various machines, which may or may not be running UNIX. The files are not supposed to have any trailing blank lines after the last line. I also need to compare the number of lines in the file with a corresponding file which contains the number of lines expected in the first file, and process the file only if the numbers are equal.

My problem now is that files created on the Windows platform always have this "Incomplete last line" error when opened with vi after doing a dos2unix operation. This causes wc to count one less line than what is in the file, and the script fails when comparing the number of lines.

I tried using
  echo >> $filename
but while it solves the incomplete last line problem with the Windows-created files, it also appends a new line to the UNIX-created files.

Thanks!
 

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fconfigure(n)						       Tcl Built-In Commands						     fconfigure(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
fconfigure - Set and get options on a channel SYNOPSIS
fconfigure channelId fconfigure channelId name fconfigure channelId name value ?name value ...? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The fconfigure command sets and retrieves options for channels. ChannelId identifies the channel for which to set or query an option. If no name or value arguments are supplied, the command returns a list containing alternating option names and values for the channel. If name is supplied but no value then the command returns the current value of the given option. If one or more pairs of name and value are supplied, the command sets each of the named options to the corresponding value; in this case the return value is an empty string. The options described below are supported for all channels. In addition, each channel type may add options that only it supports. See the manual entry for the command that creates each type of channels for the options that that specific type of channel supports. For example, see the manual entry for the socket command for its additional options. -blocking boolean The -blocking option determines whether I/O operations on the channel can cause the process to block indefinitely. The value of the option must be a proper boolean value. Channels are normally in blocking mode; if a channel is placed into nonblocking mode it will affect the operation of the gets, read, puts, flush, and close commands; see the documentation for those commands for details. For nonblocking mode to work correctly, the application must be using the Tcl event loop (e.g. by calling Tcl_DoOneEvent or invoking the vwait command). -buffering newValue If newValue is full then the I/O system will buffer output until its internal buffer is full or until the flush command is invoked. If newValue is line, then the I/O system will automatically flush output for the channel whenever a newline character is output. If newValue is none, the I/O system will flush automatically after every output operation. The default is for -buffering to be set to full except for channels that connect to terminal-like devices; for these channels the initial setting is line. Additionally, stdin and stdout are intially set to line, and stderr is set to none. -buffersize newSize Newvalue must be an integer; its value is used to set the size of buffers, in bytes, subsequently allocated for this channel to store input or output. Newvalue must be between ten and one million, allowing buffers of ten to one million bytes in size. -encoding name | This option is used to specify the encoding of the channel, so that the data can be converted to and from Unicode for use in Tcl. | For instance, in order for Tcl to read characters from a Japanese file in shiftjis and properly process and display the contents, | the encoding would be set to shiftjis. Thereafter, when reading from the channel, the bytes in the Japanese file would be converted | to Unicode as they are read. Writing is also supported - as Tcl strings are written to the channel they will automatically be con- | verted to the specified encoding on output. | If a file contains pure binary data (for instance, a JPEG image), the encoding for the channel should be configured to be binary. | Tcl will then assign no interpretation to the data in the file and simply read or write raw bytes. The Tcl binary command can be | used to manipulate this byte-oriented data. | The default encoding for newly opened channels is the same platform- and locale-dependent system encoding used for interfacing with | the operating system. | -eofchar char -eofchar {inChar outChar} This option supports DOS file systems that use Control-z (x1a) as an end of file marker. If char is not an empty string, then this character signals end-of-file when it is encountered during input. For output, the end-of-file character is output when the channel is closed. If char is the empty string, then there is no special end of file character marker. For read-write channels, a two-ele- ment list specifies the end of file marker for input and output, respectively. As a convenience, when setting the end-of-file char- acter for a read-write channel you can specify a single value that will apply to both reading and writing. When querying the end- of-file character of a read-write channel, a two-element list will always be returned. The default value for -eofchar is the empty string in all cases except for files under Windows. In that case the -eofchar is Control-z (x1a) for reading and the empty string for writing. -translation mode -translation {inMode outMode} In Tcl scripts the end of a line is always represented using a single newline character ( ). However, in actual files and devices the end of a line may be represented differently on different platforms, or even for different devices on the same platform. For example, under UNIX newlines are used in files, whereas carriage-return-linefeed sequences are normally used in network connections. On input (i.e., with gets and read) the Tcl I/O system automatically translates the external end-of-line representation into newline characters. Upon output (i.e., with puts), the I/O system translates newlines to the external end-of-line representation. The default translation mode, auto, handles all the common cases automatically, but the -translation option provides explicit control over the end of line translations. The value associated with -translation is a single item for read-only and write-only channels. The value is a two-element list for read-write channels; the read translation mode is the first element of the list, and the write translation mode is the second ele- ment. As a convenience, when setting the translation mode for a read-write channel you can specify a single value that will apply to both reading and writing. When querying the translation mode of a read-write channel, a two-element list will always be returned. The following values are currently supported: auto As the input translation mode, auto treats any of newline (lf), carriage return (cr), or carriage return followed by a new- line (crlf) as the end of line representation. The end of line representation can even change from line-to-line, and all cases are translated to a newline. As the output translation mode, auto chooses a platform specific representation; for sockets on all platforms Tcl chooses crlf, for all Unix flavors, it chooses lf, for the Macintosh platform it chooses cr and for the various flavors of Windows it chooses crlf. The default setting for -translation is auto for both input and output. binary | No end-of-line translations are performed. This is nearly identical to lf mode, except that in addition binary mode also | sets the end-of-file character to the empty string (which disables it) and sets the encoding to binary (which disables encod- | ing filtering). See the description of -eofchar and -encoding for more information. cr The end of a line in the underlying file or device is represented by a single carriage return character. As the input trans- lation mode, cr mode converts carriage returns to newline characters. As the output translation mode, cr mode translates newline characters to carriage returns. This mode is typically used on Macintosh platforms. crlf The end of a line in the underlying file or device is represented by a carriage return character followed by a linefeed char- acter. As the input translation mode, crlf mode converts carriage-return-linefeed sequences to newline characters. As the output translation mode, crlf mode translates newline characters to carriage-return-linefeed sequences. This mode is typi- cally used on Windows platforms and for network connections. lf The end of a line in the underlying file or device is represented by a single newline (linefeed) character. In this mode no translations occur during either input or output. This mode is typically used on UNIX platforms. SEE ALSO
close(n), flush(n), gets(n), puts(n), read(n), socket(n) KEYWORDS
blocking, buffering, carriage return, end of line, flushing, linemode, newline, nonblocking, platform, translation, encoding, filter, byte array, binary Tcl 8.1 fconfigure(n)
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