Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: awk doubt
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers awk doubt Post 7832 by vadivel on Tuesday 2nd of October 2001 02:50:16 PM
Old 10-02-2001
I'm not a student.

Sorry,

I'm a programmer. I'm having the problem in
extracting a report file. I dont want to give
the exact information in the report file,
so I gave an example. If it leads to a
misunderstanding that I'm a student I feel
sorry for that.

Regards,
vadivel.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

doubt in AWK

Hi all, column1 -------- 33 44 55 66 please provide the script using awk command to dispaly output 55. Help apperciated.. thanks, Nirmal (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: abnirmal
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk doubt

hi how to get the values in two columns (may be 2nd and 5th column) of a file line by line. either i want to get the two fields into different variables and use a for loop to get these values line by line. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pradee
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

doubt about awk

i have a file like this: awk.lst smith : sales : 1200 : 2 jones:it:25000 : 2 roger : it : 1500 : 2 ravi | acct | 15000 i have 3 doubts 1) when i say awk -F ":" '$2 ~ /'it'/ {print $0}' awk.lst i am not able to get jones in the ouput , is it because of space issue? 2)how to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soujanya_srk
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK doubt

Hello people I have a doubt about awk... I´m using it to create a condition where I do not want to use the 0 (zero) value of a certain column. - This is the original file: string,number,date abc,0,20050101 def,1,20060101 ghi,2,20040101 jkl,12,20090101 mno,123,20020101... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rafael.Buria
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

doubt in awk

Hi , I have a file in the below format: 1.txt awk 'BEGIN { printf ("%1s", "man" )} ' awk 'BEGIN { printf ("%9s", "women" )} ' awk 'BEGIN { printf ("%56s", "human")} ' ## ### ## echo "$!" ## awk 'BEGIN { printf ("%1s", "aaa" )} ' awk 'BEGIN { printf ("%19s", "bbb" )} ' ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jisha
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

doubt on awk

I have executed the below command: find . -name "Ks*" -type f -exec ls -ltr {} \; | awk '{printf("%ld %s %d %s \n",$5,$6,$7,$8,$9)}' and here is the output: 1282 Oct 7 2004 51590 Jul 10 2006 921 Oct 7 2004 1389 Jun 4 2003 1037 May 19 2004 334 Mar 24 2004 672 Jul 8 2003 977... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkatesht
6 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk doubt

I have a file sample.txt with the following contents: the following gives output as awk 'NF{s=$0; print s}' sample.txt but, awk 'NF{s=$0}{print s}' sample.txtgives output as why this difference, can someone explain me? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
6 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

a doubt in awk

instead of writing print command in awk, i saw in some posts that we can simply write a number before we end the awk command and it will print the file. As given below: $awk '{some manipulation; print}' filename $awk '{some manipulation}1' filename I also tried replacing the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: PranavEcstasy
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Doubt on using AWK

DE_CODE|1{AXXANY}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NY DE_CODE|1{AXXATX}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|TX DE_CODE|1{AXXABT}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|BT DE_CODE|1{AXXANJ}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NJ i have out put file like below i have to convert it in the format as below. DE_CODE = AXXANY APP_NAME= TELCO LOC = NY... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mail2sant
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Doubt in awk

Hi, I got a below requirement from this forum, but the solution provided was not clear. Below is the requirement Input file A 1 Z A 1 ZZ B 2 Y B 2 AA Required output B Y|AA A Z|ZZ (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: stew
5 Replies
flea(1) 							   User Manuals 							   flea(1)

NAME
flea - Report a bug (or rather a flea) in mutt. SYNOPSIS
flea DESCRIPTION
flea is a shell script which helps you to submit a bug report against the mutt(1) mail user agent. If you invoke flea, you'll first be prompted for a short description of the problem you experience. This will be used as the bug report's subject line, so it should be concise, but informative. You are then asked to assign an initial severity level to the problem you observe; flea will give you a description which severity level is appropriate or not. Then, you are asked for the location of a core dump (normally named core) which may have been left over by a crash of your mutt(1). You can just type "no" here, or you can enter the path leading to a core dump. flea will try to use either sdb(1), dbx(1), or gdb(1) to extract some information from this core dump which may be helpful to developers in order to determine the reason for the crash. Finally, you are asked whether or not you want to include personal and system mutt(1) configuration files with the bug report. If at all possible, we urge you to answer these questions with "yes", since a reference configuration makes it incredibly easier to track down a problem. If you are using Debian GNU/Linux, flea will now check whether or not mutt has been installed as a Debian package on your system, and sug- gest to file the bug against the mutt(1) and Debian bug tracking systems. This option was added since the mutt(1) project uses another instantiation of the Debian bug tracking system, so submitting bugs against both systems in one pass is simple. You are then dropped into your favorite editor as determined by the EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables. Please give us details about the problem in the empty space below the line reading "Please type your report below this line". We are most interested in precise information on what symptoms you observe and what steps may be used to reproduce the bug. Chances are that problems which can easily be reproduced will be fixed quickly. So please take some time when filling out this part of the template. The remainder of the template contains various kinds of information gathered from your system, including output of the uname(1) command, output from mutt(1) itself, and your system's mutt(1) configuration files. You may wish to browse through this part of the bug report form in order to avoid leaking confidential information to the public. If you leave the editor, flea will give you the option to review, re-edit, submit, or abandon your bug report. If you decide to submit it, a mail message containing your report will be sent to <submit@bugs.guug.de>. You'll receive a copy of this message. While your bug report is being processed by the bug tracking system, you will receive various e-mail messages from the bug tracking system informing you about what's going on: Once your bug report has been entered into the bug tracking system, it will be assigned a unique serial number about which you are informed via e-mail. If you wish to submit additional information about the bug, you can just send it to the address serial@bugs.guug.de. Later, you will most likely receive questions from the developers about the problem you observed, and you will eventually be informed that your bug report has been closed. This means that the bug has been fixed at least in the cvs(1) repository. If the answers you receive don't satisfy you, don't hesitate to contact the developers directly under mutt-dev@mutt.org. You can also browse your bug report and all additional information and replies connected to it using the bug tracking system's Web inter- face under the following URL: http://bugs.guug.de/ ENVIRONMENT
flea will use the following environment variables: EMAIL Your electronic mail address. Will be used to set the bug report's From header, and to send you a copy of the report. LOGNAME Your login name. If the EMAIL environment variable isn't set, this will be used instead to send you a copy of the report. Setting the sender will be left to sendmail(1) on your system. REPLYTO If set, the bug report will contain a Reply-To header with the e-mail address contained in this environment variable. ORGANIZATION If set, the bug report will contain an Organization header with the contents of this environment variable. PAGER If set, this environment variable will be expected to contain the path to your favorite pager for viewing the bug report. If unset, more(1) will be used. VISUAL If set, this environment variable will be expected to contain the path to your favorite visual editor. EDITOR If set, this environment variable will be expected to contain the path to your favorite editor. This variable is examined if and only if the VISUAL environment variable is unset. If EDITOR is unset, vi(1) will be used to edit the bug report. FILES
core If present, this file may contain a post-mortem memory dump of mutt. It will be inspected using the debugger installed on your sys- tem. SEE ALSO
dbx(1), gdb(1), lynx(1), mutt(1), muttrc(5), sdb(1), sendmail(1), uname(1), vi(1) The mutt bug tracking system: http://bugs.guug.de/ AUTHOR
flea and this manual page were written by Thomas Roessler <roessler@does-not-exist.org>. Unix July 2000 flea(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:45 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy