Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2000 06:53:04 +0300 From: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr> To: Marc Wandschneider <marcw@lanfear.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: AWK trivia Message-ID: <20001016065304.A66023@gray.westgate.gr> In-Reply-To: <000701c036d4$d6578340$0800000a@lanfear.com>; from marcw@lanfear.com on Sun, Oct 15, 2000 at 08:22:07PM %2B0200 References: <000701c036d4$d6578340$0800000a@lanfear.com>
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On Sun, Oct 15, 2000 at 08:22:07PM +0200, Marc Wandschneider wrote: > > so, i have a file in the following format: > > SOME_SINGLE_WORD STRING "A quoted String" > > Where the two things are separated by any amount of whitespace, not > including \n. <off the top of my head awk & sed games> I would try something like: % sed -e 's/[ ^I]*/:/' to make the first part of the line (the one including SOME_SINGLE_WORD_STRING, in your example) be separated from the rest of the line by a single ':' character. Then it should be fairly easy to have AWK print what you want. % cat format.awk { printf "$1 = %s\n", $1; printf "$2 = "; for (i = 2; i < NF; i++) { printf "%s%s", $i, FS; } printf "%s\n", $NF; } and fire up awk with something like: % sed -e 's/[ ^I]*/:/' | awk -f format.awk -F: Ciao, Giorgos. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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