Hi
I use sed in a script for severall changes in files. I whish one of the substitutions I made to be aplied to every line that has the word "scripts" with the exception for the ones that start with "rsh", wich I wish sed to ignore . Is this possible? If yes, how can I do it?
The substitution... (2 Replies)
From the below file I want to grep only the lines except the comment sections. But grep -v "#" is eliminating the last line because it has one # in between.
Any idea how can I ignore only the lines which have # at the begining (I mean comment lines) ?
Thanks a lot to all in advance
C Saha (1 Reply)
Is there a way to tell awk to ignore the first 11 lines of a file?? example, I have a csv file with all the heading information in the first lines. I want to split the file into 5-6 different files but I want to retain the the first 11 lines of the file.
As it is now I run this command:
... (8 Replies)
Hello Experts,
I have two files called "old" and "new". My old file contains 10 lines and my new file contains 10 + "n" lines.
The first field in both these files contain ID. I sort these two files on ID. I am interested in only the lines that are in the new file and not in old.
I tried... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm looking for a way to generate an error when a command does not print an expected message. For example :
test.sh :
echo hi!test.exp :
exp_internal 1
spawn ./test.sh
expect {
"hi!" {puts "bingo!"}
"*" {puts "error!" ; exit 1}
}
I expected test.exp to match the string... (2 Replies)
I am trying to print those line which has no # in the begining of the line.
The sed I used for this purpose as shown below is not giving the required output.
echo 'PDE 5600' | sed -n 's/^\!#/&/p'
Where lies the problem:confused: (3 Replies)
I am having 6 files named file1,file2....file6 and i need to append number of lines in each file to begining of the file. For example,
If file 1 contains
a
b
c
d
then after adding new line file1 should contain
4
a
b
c
d
Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hi,
i am having one text file it contains some blank lines and i want to ignore that blank lines .
#! /bin/bash
clear
rdCount=0;
while read myline
do
echo $myline
let rdCount=$rdCount+1
done < ps.txt
echo "Total line=$rdCount"
and ps .txt contains the data- (17 Replies)
Hi,
I have a shell script, which reads a *.txt file - line by line. In this text file, I have some lines beginning with "#" that I want to ignore :
MY_FILE
#blah blah blah 1
blah blah blah 2
blah blah blah 3
#blah blah blah 4
I want my script to read only the following lines... (3 Replies)
I am getting the varible value from a grep command as:
var=$(grep "Group" File1.txt | sed 's/Group Name*//g;s/,//g;s/://g;s/-//g')
which leaves me the value of $var=xyz.
now i want to append $var value in the begining of all the lines present in the file. Can u please suggest?
Input file:
1... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: rade777
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
diff3
DIFF3(1) General Commands Manual DIFF3(1)NAME
diff3 - 3-way differential file comparison
SYNOPSIS
diff3 [ -exEX3 ] file1 file2 file3
DESCRIPTION
Diff3 compares three versions of a file, and publishes disagreeing ranges of text flagged with these codes:
==== all three files differ
====1 file1 is different
====2 file2 is different
====3 file3 is different
The type of change suffered in converting a given range of a given file to some other is indicated in one of these ways:
f : n1 a Text is to be appended after line number n1 in file f, where f = 1, 2, or 3.
f : n1 , n2 c Text is to be changed in the range line n1 to line n2. If n1 = n2, the range may be abbreviated to n1.
The original contents of the range follows immediately after a c indication. When the contents of two files are identical, the contents of
the lower-numbered file is suppressed.
Under the -e option, diff3 publishes a script for the editor ed that will incorporate into file1 all changes between file2 and file3, i.e.
the changes that normally would be flagged ==== and ====3. Option -x (-3) produces a script to incorporate only changes flagged ====
(====3). The following command will apply the resulting script to `file1'.
(cat script; echo '1,$p') | ed - file1
The -E and -X are similar to -e and -x, respectively, but treat overlapping changes (i.e., changes that would be flagged with ==== in the
normal listing) differently. The overlapping lines from both files will be inserted by the edit script, bracketed by "<<<<<<" and ">>>>>>"
lines.
For example, suppose lines 7-8 are changed in both file1 and file2. Applying the edit script generated by the command
"diff3 -E file1 file2 file3"
to file1 results in the file:
lines 1-6
of file1
<<<<<<< file1
lines 7-8
of file1
=======
lines 7-8
of file3
>>>>>>> file3
rest of file1
The -E option is used by RCS merge(1) to insure that overlapping changes in the merged files are preserved and brought to someone's atten-
tion.
FILES
/tmp/d3?????
/usr/libexec/diff3
SEE ALSO diff(1)BUGS
Text lines that consist of a single `.' will defeat -e.
7th Edition October 21, 1996 DIFF3(1)