10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am having data in XML format and trying to extract codes form two fields called <String>, below is the data.
<Node>tollfree<Condition>BooleanOperator<Operation>AND</Operation><Condition>BooleanOperator<Operation>NOT</Operation><Condition>FieldSelection<Field Context="ALL fields"... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: rramkrishnas
7 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Gents,
Please give a help with this case
Input
10001010G1
10001010G1
10001010G1
10001010G2
10001010G3
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001012G1
10001014G1
10001014G1
10001014G2 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jiam912
5 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
HI All,
I would like to pass a integer and get all values under this index the by using awk. Could anyone help?
Thanks :>
input:
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
1,2,3,48,5,6,7
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
e.g. i pass 4 to awk command
output:
4
48
4
Video tutorial on how to use code tags in The UNIX and Linux... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mimilaw
8 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
1 2 000060000
How do i return the point in the string where the 6 is?
i.e what I want on output is
1 2 5
something like awk '{print $1 $2 index($3,6) }'
but I can't get it to work
Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: garethsays
3 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have a line "My name is Deepak"
How can i search a string Deepak in the line and find out its index position.
Here in this case the result should be 12. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dr46014
3 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have a file (FileNames.txt) which contains the following data in it.
$ cat FileNames.txt
MYFILE17XXX208Sep191307.csv
MYFILE19XXX208Sep192124.csv
MYFILE20XXX208Sep192418.csv
MYFILE22XXX208Sep193234.csv
MYFILE21XXX208Sep193018.csv
MYFILE24XXX208Sep194053.csv... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: krish_indus
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
brothers why inode index starts from 1 unlike array inex which starts from 0
its a question from the design of unix operating system of maurice j.bach
i need to know the answer urgently...someone help please (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sairamdevotee
1 Replies
8. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
why do inode indices starts from 1 unlike array indexes which starts from 0
its a question from "the design of unix operating system" of maurice j bach
id be glad if i get to know the answer quickly
:) (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sairamdevotee
0 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi, :)
In a shell script i came accross the following lines
1.for i in ` find /home/oracle -name ch'
2.do
3.echo $i
4.idx=`expr index $i .`
5.done
Here iam not able to understand the porpose of the word "index" in line 4.
any help ?
cheers
RRK (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravi raj kumar
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi, can anyone explain me how this works (how the flow goes)?
Example:
CLIENT="UNIXHELP"
The second argument passed $2="UNIX"
RESULT=`awk -F"=" '/CLIENTS=/ {len = index($2,"'${CLIENT}'");print len }' $2`
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: abrd600
1 Replies
SHAPELIB(1) User Commands SHAPELIB(1)
NAME
dbfdump - dump xBase DBF files as text
SYNOPSIS
dbfdump [-h] [-m] [-r] file
DESCRIPTION
Dumps the contents of file to standard output. The first line contains the field names appearing in file, and each of the following lines
contains the field values of a record. Field names and values are padded by spaces to their field widths. Empty fields are printed as the
string "(NULL)".
OPTIONS
-h Prints the column field definitions before other output. Each field definition consists of a line of the form
Field: index, Type=type, Title=`name', Width=width, Decimals=precision
where index is the zero offset column number of the field; the type indicates the datatype of the field value and is either "Inte-
ger", "Real" or "String"; name is the field's name; width is the number of bytes reserved for the field's value; and precision is
the number of decimal places of precision for "Real" type fields, and is zero for "Integer" and "String" type fields.
-m Prints each record in multiline format separated by empty lines. The first line of a record gives the number of the record in the
form
Records: record_index
where record_index is the zero offset number of the record in the file, and then each field of the record appears on its own line in
the format
name: value
-r Prints the exact bytes occurring in file for field values and suppresses printing "(NULL)" for empty values.
EXIT STATUS
0 Successful program execution.
1 Missing file argument.
2 Failed to open file.
3 There are no fields in file.
DIAGNOSTICS
The following diagnostics may be issued on stdout:
DBFOpen(file,"r") failed.
There are no fields in this table!
AUTHORS
Frank Warmerdam (warmerdam@pobox.com) is the maintainer of the shapelib shapefile library. Joonas Pihlaja (jpihlaja@cc.helsinki.fi) wrote
this man page.
BUGS
Unless the -r option is given, values in numeric fields that overflow the int or double types of the C language are printed as plus or
minus a huge number. For integer fields the huge value is HUGE_VALL from <stdlib.h> and for real fields it is HUGE_VALF.
SEE ALSO
dbf_dump(1), dbfcreate(1), dbfadd(1), shpadd(1), shpcreate(1), shpdump(1), shprewind(1)
shapelib OCTOBER 2004 SHAPELIB(1)