inserting uniq sequential numbers at the start of the file


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers inserting uniq sequential numbers at the start of the file
# 8  
Old 11-19-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by jingi1234
Gurus,
Please help
Please review the rules.

You'll see that rule 4 states:
Do not 'bump up' questions if they are not answered promptly....

Thanks
ZB
 
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Replace groups into sequential numbers

I have a file that looks like this: n1 1 n2 1 n3 1 n4 3 n4 3 n2 5 n2 5 n2 5 n2 5 n3 5 n3 5 n4 6 n7 6 that is a name followed be a descriptive number. I want to make these numbers sequential starting from 0 but without changing the "neighbours" each name belongs to. So the above... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: FelipeAd
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Inserting new line if two sequential lines begin with the same string

Hi I have a file like this: Peter North Mary Peter North Peter Borough Mary I need there to put 'X' (or anything) on a new line between the two lines where 'Peter' begins the line. There will be many matches to this string, but they will always begin with 'Peter'. Ie, the resulting... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: majormajormajor
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

[Solved] awk solution to add sequential numbers based on a word

Hi experts, I've been struggling to format a large genetic dataset. It's complicated to explain so I'll simply post example input/output $cat input.txt ID GENE pos start end blah1 coolgene 1 3 5 blah2 coolgene 1 4 6 blah3 coolgene 1 4 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: torchij
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Inserting a sequential number into a field on a flat file

I have a csv flatfile with a few million rows. I need to replace a field (field number is 85) in the file with a sequential number. As an example, let's assume there are only 4 fields in the file: A,A,,32 A,A,,27 A,B,,43 C,C,,354 If I wanted to amend the 3rd field in this way my... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BristolSmithy
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sequential numbers

Hi All, I am looking for a simple way to write numbers to a file sequentially starting from 1 and ending on a specified upper limit. Example of the output file is below Example 1 2 3 4 5 . . . . 1000 please let me know the best way to do it. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
10 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Rename files in sub directories with sequential numbers

I can rename a file with sequential numbers from 1 to N with this script: num=1 for file in *.dat;do mv "$file" "$(printf "%u" $num).txt" let num=num+1 done The script begins with renaming a some.dat file to 1.dat.txt and goes on sequentially renaming other DAT files to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shoaibjameel123
1 Replies

7. Programming

Tool to simulate non-sequential disk I/O (simulate db file sequential read) in C POSIX

Writing a Tool to simulate non-sequential disk I/O (simulate db file sequential read) in C POSIX I have over the years come across the same issue a couple of times, and it normally is that the read speed on SAN is absolutely atrocious when doing non-sequential I/O to the disks. Problem being of... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: vrghost
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell Scripts (Renaming file names with sequential numbers)

Hi there, Firstly, I have no experience with shell scripts so would really appreciate some help. I have the following shell script that is causing some problems: moveit() { && set -x if then DOUBLE_DELIVERY=$(grep... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: thebeno
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Inserting a range of consecutive numbers into a text file

I have a text file in the following format .... START 1,1 2,1 3,1 .. .. 9,1 10,1 END .... I want to change to the output to .... START 1,1 2,1 3,1 .. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: VNR
4 Replies

10. Programming

Reading special characters while converting sequential file to line sequential

We have to convert a sequential file to a 80 char line sequential file (HP UX platform).The sequential file contains special characters. which after conversion of the file to line sequential are getting coverted into "new line" or "tab" and file is getting distorted. Is there any way to read these... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rajeshsu
2 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
MAVEN(1)							   User Commands							  MAVEN(1)

NAME
Maven - Patches the POM files using the Maven dependency rules. SYNOPSIS
mh_patchpoms [option]... DESCRIPTION
Reads the file debian/$package.poms and tranform each POM file listed in the .poms file into a POM file using the Debian versions of the libraries. Also keeps a backup of each POM file which can be restored with mh_unpatchpoms OPTIONS
-h --help: show this text -V --version: show the version -p<package> --package=<package>: package to act on -k --keep-pom-version: keep the original version of the POMs but, convert all other versions in dependencies and plugins If there is a parent POM, keeps its version except when the parent is already registered in the Maven repository -e<version>, --set-version=<version>: set the version for the POM, do not use the version declared in the POM file. -r<rules> --rules=<rules>: path to the file containing the rules to apply when cleaning the POM. Optional, the default location is debian/maven.rules -R<rule>, --extra-rule=<rule>: extra rule to apply when cleaning the POM May occur multiple times, instead of or in addition to -r -u<rules> --published-rules=<rules>: path to the file containing the extra rules to publish in the property debian.mavenRules in the cleaned POM. Optional, the default location is debian/maven.pub- lishedRules -U<rule>, --extra-published-rule=<rule>: extra rule to publish May occur multiple times, instead of or in addition to -u -i<rules> --ignore-rules=<rules>: path to the file containing the rules used to remove certain dependencies from the cleaned POM Optional, the default location is debian/maven.ignoreRules -I<rule>, --extra-ignore-rule=<rule>: extra rule used to remove dependencies from the transformed POM May occur multiple times, instead of or in addition to -i -c<rules> --clean-ignore-rules=<rules>: path to the file containing the rules use to remove certain dependencies from the cleaned POM, in addition to the ignore rules specified previously. This is useful in situations such as when the Maven clean target requires more dependencies or plugins to ignore than the build target. All rules defined in clean-ignore-rules will be added to the existing rules in ignore-rules. Optional, the default location is debian/maven.cleanIgnoreRules -s --no-rules: don't apply any rules for converting versions, do not even convert versions to the default 'debian' version --no-publish-used-rule: don't publish the rule used to transform a POM's own attributes in debian.mavenRules -d --debian-build: transform during a Debian build, which means that some POM elements will be removed -b --build-no-docs: if the build doesn't need to build documentation, use this option to remove some POM elements (in particular plugins) which are useless here and may require extra dependencies and make the packaging harder. -m<repo root>--maven-repo=<repo root>: location of the Maven repository, used to force the versions of the Maven plugins used in the current POM file with the versions found in the repository -v --verbose: show more information while running -n --no-act: don't actually do anything, just print the results See also: mh_installpoms(1), mh_patchpom(1) Maven Repo Helper version 1.7.1 January 2012 MAVEN(1)