10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
In Linux you can do this to put comma separated data on its own line like this.
sed 's/ */&\n/g' /tmp/ports
sed 's/ */\n/g' /tmp/ports
How do you do this in AIX? It is not working. Is there another way to do this? Something like this.
1, 2, 3, 4
To look like this.
1
2
3
4 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
4 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
My OS : RHEL 6.7
I have a text file with comma separated values like below
$ cat testString.txt
'JOHN' , 'KEITH' , 'NEWMAN' , 'URSULA' , 'ARIANNA' , 'CHENG', . . . .
I want these values to appear like below
'JOHN' ,
'KEITH' ,
'NEWMAN' ,
'URSULA' ,
'ARIANNA' ,
'CHENG',
.... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kraljic
4 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to change a file that looks like this:
file, announcement,date, server, server01, server02, server06, file04, rec01, rec04, rec03... etc
into a vertical file like this:
file
announcement
date
server
server01
server02
server06
The file does not have to be sorted... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
5 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I want to change a file file1.txt:
1234
3456
2345
6789
3456
2333
4444
As, file2.txt in Linux:
'1234','3456','2345','6789','3456','2333','4444'
Could someone please help me. (Single liner sed, awk will be welcome!) (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: wiweq05
7 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I am facing issue, to read words in line, line as follow and i want to read word at each comma
1,you,are,two
So i want read like
1
you
are
two
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sujit_kashyap
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am in the process of creating a BASH shell scripts for a project at work. So the scenario is as such:
I have a file with each line entry separated by ':'
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
3 Replies
7. Programming
Hi All
I need a small help for the below format in making a small script in Perl or Shell.
I have a file in which a single line entries are broken into three line entries.
Eg:
I have a
pen and
notebook.
All i want is to capture in a single line in a separate file.
eg: I have a pen and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kalaiela
4 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
I have a file which lines' words are comma separated:
aa, bb, cc, uu b, ee, ff
bb, cc, zz, ee, ss, kk
oo, bb, hh, uu a, xx, ww
tt, aa, dd, yy aa, gg
I want to sort first by second column and in case of tie by fourth column with sort command.
So the output would be:
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: asanchez
4 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Kindly i want to concatenate every 12 lines ina file, using a comma separator between fields (each line)?
can anyone help please?
thanks a lot in advance. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: m_wassal
5 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a directory that contains say 100 files named sequencially like input_1.25_50_C1.txt
input_1.25_50_C2.txt
input_1.25_50_C3.txt
input_1.25_50_C4.txt
..
..
..
input_1.25_50_C100.txt
an example of the content in each of the file is:
"NAME" "MEM.SHIP"
"cgd1_10" "cgd1_10"... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
9 Replies
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)
NAME
grep, egrep, fgrep - search a file for a pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [ option ] ... expression [ file ] ...
egrep [ option ] ... [ expression ] [ file ] ...
fgrep [ option ] ... [ strings ] [ file ]
DESCRIPTION
Commands of the grep family search the input files (standard input default) for lines matching a pattern. Normally, each line found is
copied to the standard output; unless the -h flag is used, the file name is shown if there is more than one input file.
Grep patterns are limited regular expressions in the style of ed(1); it uses a compact nondeterministic algorithm. Egrep patterns are full
regular expressions; it uses a fast deterministic algorithm that sometimes needs exponential space. Fgrep patterns are fixed strings; it
is fast and compact.
The following options are recognized.
-v All lines but those matching are printed.
-c Only a count of matching lines is printed.
-l The names of files with matching lines are listed (once) separated by newlines.
-n Each line is preceded by its line number in the file.
-b Each line is preceded by the block number on which it was found. This is sometimes useful in locating disk block numbers by con-
text.
-s No output is produced, only status.
-h Do not print filename headers with output lines.
-y Lower case letters in the pattern will also match upper case letters in the input (grep only).
-e expression
Same as a simple expression argument, but useful when the expression begins with a -.
-f file
The regular expression (egrep) or string list (fgrep) is taken from the file.
-x (Exact) only lines matched in their entirety are printed (fgrep only).
Care should be taken when using the characters $ * [ ^ | ? ' " ( ) and in the expression as they are also meaningful to the Shell. It is
safest to enclose the entire expression argument in single quotes ' '.
Fgrep searches for lines that contain one of the (newline-separated) strings.
Egrep accepts extended regular expressions. In the following description `character' excludes newline:
A followed by a single character matches that character.
The character ^ ($) matches the beginning (end) of a line.
A . matches any character.
A single character not otherwise endowed with special meaning matches that character.
A string enclosed in brackets [] matches any single character from the string. Ranges of ASCII character codes may be abbreviated
as in `a-z0-9'. A ] may occur only as the first character of the string. A literal - must be placed where it can't be mistaken as
a range indicator.
A regular expression followed by * (+, ?) matches a sequence of 0 or more (1 or more, 0 or 1) matches of the regular expression.
Two regular expressions concatenated match a match of the first followed by a match of the second.
Two regular expressions separated by | or newline match either a match for the first or a match for the second.
A regular expression enclosed in parentheses matches a match for the regular expression.
The order of precedence of operators at the same parenthesis level is [] then *+? then concatenation then | and newline.
SEE ALSO
ed(1), sed(1), sh(1)
DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 if any matches are found, 1 if none, 2 for syntax errors or inaccessible files.
BUGS
Ideally there should be only one grep, but we don't know a single algorithm that spans a wide enough range of space-time tradeoffs.
Lines are limited to 256 characters; longer lines are truncated.
GREP(1)