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Search: Posts Made By: IMPe
1,379
Posted By RudiC
Some sample always helps! Try (untested)awk 'NR>5...
Some sample always helps! Try (untested)awk 'NR>5 {sub(/^/, NR-5)} 1' file
1,379
Posted By RavinderSingh13
Hello IMPe, Request you to please always do...
Hello IMPe,

Request you to please always do show sample input and expected sample output too. If I understood correctly your requirement, could you please try following and let me know if that...
Forum: Debian 10-24-2015
4,039
Posted By RudiC
Downloading with what? Would it be worthwhile to...
Downloading with what? Would it be worthwhile to look into your browser's config?
1,290
Posted By Don Cragun
You might want to try this instead: #!/bin/bash...
You might want to try this instead:
#!/bin/bash
awk '
FNR == 1 {
close(fn)
seq = substr(FILENAME, 8, 3)
fn = "test" FILENAME ".txt"
printf("%-13s\n", seq) > fn
}
FNR == 8 || FNR == 10 ||...
1,290
Posted By Don Cragun
There are enough strange constructs in your...
There are enough strange constructs in your sample shell script that I am not at all sure what you are trying to do, what your input files look like, nor what your output file is supposed to look...
1,569
Posted By CarloM
What have you tried? awk 'FNR==8 || FNR==10 ||...
What have you tried?
awk 'FNR==8 || FNR==10 || (FNR>=13 && FNR<=250)' sample.txt
should work.
57,789
Posted By vgersh99
awk '{for(i = 1; i<=NF; i++);if(i != 1 && i != 4)...
awk '{for(i = 1; i<=NF; i++);if(i != 1 && i != 4) print($i)}' file.csv
57,789
Posted By Aia
Maybe? awk '{$1=$4=":"; gsub(/:,/, "")};1'...
Maybe?

awk '{$1=$4=":"; gsub(/:,/, "")};1' OFS=, FS=, file.csv
5,793
Posted By Scrutinizer
Hi, try: date --date="$(date +%Y%m15) 1 month...
Hi, try:
date --date="$(date +%Y%m15) 1 month ago" +%Y%m

This behavior occurs, because februari 30 does not exist. So it is best to use the middle of the month to calculate the previous month..
...
5,788
Posted By Corona688
What are the contents of file.tmp?
What are the contents of file.tmp?
5,788
Posted By RudiC
Try sth likeawk -F, '{for (i=4;i<=26;i++)...
Try sth likeawk -F, '{for (i=4;i<=26;i++) SUM[i]+=$i} END {for (i=4;i<=26;i++) print i, SUM[i]}' OFS="\t" file
5,788
Posted By Corona688
How about you tell us exactly what you are trying...
How about you tell us exactly what you are trying to do? I don't think your original solution was the most efficient, running awk once per line.
2,010
Posted By RudiC
As you are using awk anyhow, why don't you do the...
As you are using awk anyhow, why don't you do the maths and formatting all in one single awk script? Might be clearer, cleaner and easier to maintain.
2,283
Posted By ctsgnb
You can then go for : sed...
You can then go for :

sed 's!\(...\)\(...\)..!\2\1!' yourfileor (a little more "secure")
sed 's!\(../\)\(../\)..!\2\1!' yourfileNote that when you go from YYYY to YY you loose information and may...
2,283
Posted By ctsgnb
Could be done with simple sed statements like: ...
Could be done with simple sed statements like:
sed 's!\(..\)/\(..\)!\2/\1!' yourfile
orsed 's!\(...\)\(...\)!\2\1!' yourfile
2,283
Posted By CarloM
I suspect d[3] may actually be the rest of the...
I suspect d[3] may actually be the rest of the line. Try setting FS & OFS separately.
awk '{split($1,d,"/"); $1=d[2]"/"d[1]"/"(substr(d[3],3,2)); print}' FS=, OFS=, file
2,283
Posted By CarloM
"%2d/%02d/%02d,%s,%s,%s\n" is expecting 6...
"%2d/%02d/%02d,%s,%s,%s\n" is expecting 6 arguments, and you only have 4 (and 11 or 12 fields on the lines).

One way might be to use split rather than having multiple field separators:
awk...
4,118
Posted By ctsgnb
To keep the same formatting: sed 's;[:/];,;g'...
To keep the same formatting:
sed 's;[:/];,;g' yourfile | sort -t, -k 4,4 -k 2,3 -k 5,6 | sed 's/,/:/5;s:,:/:3;s:,:/:2'or move the YY at the beginning of the date so that the format will change into...
4,118
Posted By ctsgnb
A best practice is to use the YYYYMMDD format...
A best practice is to use the YYYYMMDD format (date '+%Y%m%d') for the date, so that further sorting are made easy.

Not that YYYY is better than YY because retaining only the 2 last digit suppose...
2,451
Posted By Corona688
The feature you are looking for is called a...
The feature you are looking for is called a backreference, you can quote parts of text inside \( \) and refer to them later with \1 \2 \3 ...

sed 's/:\([0-5]\)[1-5]:/:\10:/g' file.txt
2,451
Posted By disedorgue
Hi, try: sed -e 's/\(:[0-9]\)[1-9]:/\10:/'...
Hi, try:
sed -e 's/\(:[0-9]\)[1-9]:/\10:/' file.txt
Regards.

Edit: Too late :)

In Fact, no, @Corona688: [0-5] it's right but [1-5] ?
2,451
Posted By Corona688
Because that's what he had. I suspect we don't...
Because that's what he had. I suspect we don't completely know his requirements, maybe he wants to do rounding...
2,451
Posted By disedorgue
He said: allways to full ten-minutes :)
He said:
allways to full ten-minutes :)
2,451
Posted By Corona688
Yes... and then showed an example that matched...
Yes... and then showed an example that matched 1-5. Does he want to round down to ten minutes for low numbers, and up to ten minutes for high ones?

Being unsure, I showed him how backreferences...
2,010
Posted By Scrutinizer
Instead of "$T20-$T120", the proper syntax would...
Instead of "$T20-$T120", the proper syntax would be "$(( T20 - T120 ))"
--edit--
That should be $(echo "$T20 - $T120" | bc) since it is bash, not ksh93
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