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Dragokas
- Posts: 43
- Joined: 30 Jul 2013 09:42
- Location: Ukraine, USSR
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#1
Post
by Dragokas » 13 Jun 2014 05:25
Hi !
I write this code to extract from all txt files the lines with 2 or more '.' character.
Code: Select all
@(for %a in (*.txt) do @(type %a& echo.)) | find ".." > new.txt
All files have 1 string (no CrLf).
That's why I use 'echo.'
But new.txt have an extra 'space'-character on the end of each line.
Can someone explain why?
The code:
Code: Select all
@(for %a in (*.txt) do (echo ..)) | find ".."
Result:
(echo .. )
2 spaces after '..'
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Squashman
- Expert
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- Joined: 23 Dec 2011 13:59
#2
Post
by Squashman » 13 Jun 2014 06:13
did you try removing the spaces before and after the PIPE and redirection characters
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Dragokas
- Posts: 43
- Joined: 30 Jul 2013 09:42
- Location: Ukraine, USSR
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#3
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by Dragokas » 13 Jun 2014 08:06
Yea, the result is same.
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foxidrive
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- Joined: 10 Feb 2012 02:20
#4
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by foxidrive » 13 Jun 2014 08:32
There is a thread here which discusses the pipe and errant spaces.
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foxidrive
- Expert
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- Joined: 10 Feb 2012 02:20
#5
Post
by foxidrive » 13 Jun 2014 08:34
Try this:
Code: Select all
for %a in (*.txt) do find ".." < "%a" > new.txt
You might have to show us some of your data if it needs extra processing.
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Squashman
- Expert
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- Joined: 23 Dec 2011 13:59
#6
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by Squashman » 13 Jun 2014 08:49
foxidrive wrote:Try this:
Code: Select all
for %a in (*.txt) do find ".." < "%a" > new.txt
You might have to show us some of your data if it needs extra processing.
I was just going to suggest that because I could not understand why he was using the echo and pipe.
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einstein1969
- Expert
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- Joined: 15 Jun 2012 13:16
- Location: Italy, Rome
#7
Post
by einstein1969 » 13 Jun 2014 08:57
Dragokas wrote:Hi !
I write this code to extract from all txt files the lines with 2 or more '.' character.
Code: Select all
@(for %a in (*.txt) do @(type %a& echo.)) | find ".." > new.txt
All files have 1 string (no CrLf).
That's why I use 'echo.'
But new.txt have an extra 'space'-character on the end of each line.
Can someone explain why?
The code:
Code: Select all
@(for %a in (*.txt) do (echo ..)) | find ".."
Result:
(echo .. )
2 spaces after '..'
The space in output is only one.
This explain why.
You can produce no space using:
einstein1969
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Squashman
- Expert
- Posts: 4486
- Joined: 23 Dec 2011 13:59
#8
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by Squashman » 13 Jun 2014 09:01
So he is trying to concatenate the output all onto one line in the output file?
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foxidrive
- Expert
- Posts: 6031
- Joined: 10 Feb 2012 02:20
#9
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by foxidrive » 13 Jun 2014 09:20
I get the impression that his data is a single line in a bunch of text files.