Does the string you're grepping for change for each individual xml file? Because if you rename the file to whatever your searchterm is, you are just going to keep overwriting the file each time a new match is found.
You could try something along the lines of the following
Say if five .xml files contain the searchterm "something", these will be renamed something_1.xml through something_5.xml.
Is this what you want? If not, be a little more specific about exactly what it is you're trying to achieve.
a script, cheer that prints its parameter as shown in the example below.
eg:
$ cheer U N I X
Give me a U!
U!
Give me a N!
N!
Give me a I!
I!
Give me a X!
X!
#!/bin/sh
for letter
do
echo "Give me a $letter!";echo "$letter!"
done
this is the code i used for the above script (2 Replies)
Hello guys, I need some help to solve a little problem that I have here:
I have a big file with almost 100.000 lines of data, here is an example of line:
100099C01101C00000000059399489283CREMOVISTAR_TX 010001C00000000000099069799MOVISTAR_Tx ... (7 Replies)
Hello guys,
Forgive me if I duplicate the post but i think i make a mistake choosing the correct forum.
I need some help to solve a little problem, I have a big file with almost 100.000 lines of data, here is an example of line:
100099C01101C00000000059399489283CREMOVISTAR_TX ... (3 Replies)
Hi again. Sorry if it seems like I'm spamming the boards a bit, but I figured I might as well ask all the questions I need answers to at once, and hopefully at least get some.
I have installed Solaris 10 on a server. The default text editors are there (vi, ex, ed, maybe others, I know emacs is... (4 Replies)
I've began my journey at 7:50, and at this time i've lost 40 minutes in this easy but :confused::eek:-script.
Someone can help me ? I want to see the differences beetween all xml files in two directories (they must be equals), and this is my script:
#!/bin/bash
dir1="261108"... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am planning the following to do. On my linux system I've got different users in the /home/ directory. These users have file limitations.
So every user below the /home/ directory should get a text file in a seperate folder /home/$user/files/ which tells him how many files he is already... (2 Replies)
Hi to all,
first of all,i am working on MINIX 3 OS.
I want to create a bash script file,which will create a list of files(not directories) that have been modified one specific day (i.e today) under my home directory.
thank you very much!! :) (8 Replies)
Hello every one :D
I am very new in Linux ... that why I do not have any idea to write the script :confused:
I am trying to read some tutorial , but I do not have enough time to do it !
because I have to submit my project results in next Wednesday
I need your help to write script !
I will... (2 Replies)
:wall:I've this simple code:
STF=/opt/aaa
cat $STF | nice sort -u > $STF.new && mv $STF.new $STF
Which works until today. What happened is that this script has been corrupted the FS, so I've to use fschk to repair the filesystem.
I presume the move command executed just a little too early... (1 Reply)
Write a script, which of the directory including sources of kernel, choose files with sources in C (files with .c extension), including in name "io" with dirvers (located in random subdirectory drivers) and place their content in file FILE. (to 20 lines).
Could someone help me with this task?... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Czabi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
stag-splitter
STAG-SPLITTER(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation STAG-SPLITTER(1p)NAME
stag-splitter - splits a stag file into multiple files
SYNOPSIS
stag-splitter -split person -name social_security_no file.xml
DESCRIPTION
Splits a file using a user specified parser (default xml) around a specified split node, naming each file according to the name argument
the files will be named anonymously, unless the '-name' switch is specified; this will use the value of the specified element as the
filename
eg; if we have
<top>
<a>
<b>foo</b>
<c>yah</c>
<d>
<e>xxx</e>
</d>
</a>
<a>
<b>bar</b>
<d>
<e>wibble</e>
</d>
</a>
</top>
if we run
stag-splitter -split a -name b
it will generate two files, "foo.xml" and "bar.xml"
input format can be 'xml', 'sxpr' or 'itext' - if this is left blank the format will be guessed from the file suffix
the output format defaults to the same as the input format, but another can be chosen.
files go in the current directory, but this can be overridden with the '-dir' switch
USAGE
stag-splitter [-split <ELEMENT-NAME>] [-name <ELEMENT-NAME>] [-dir <DIR>] [-format <INPUT-FORMAT>] [-outformat <OUTPUT-FORMAT>] <FILENAMES>
-p|parser FORMAT
FORMAT is one of xml, sxpr or itext, or the name of a perl module
xml assumed as default
-w|writer FORMAT
FORMAT is one of xml, sxpr or itext, or the name of a perl module
-split|s NODE
node to split on
-name|n NODE
field/element to use when naming files
will use surrogate IDs if this argument not specified
-dir|d DIR
write files to this directory
perl v5.10.0 2008-12-23 STAG-SPLITTER(1p)