Single file contain files name and scores | text processing
I have a folder called files
that has 100 files, each one has one value inside;such as: 0.974323
This my code to generate those files and store the single value inside:
DIR="/home/XX/folder"
INPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/eval"
OUTPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/files"
for i in $INPUT_DIR/*
do
groovy $DIR/calculate.groovy $i > $OUTPUT_DIR/${i##*/}_rates.txt
done
That will generate 100 files inside /home/XX/folder/files, but what I want is one single file that has in each line two columns separated by tab contain the score and the name of the file (which is i).
the score t name of the file
So, the output will be:
0.9363728 t resultFile.txt
0.37229 t outFile.txt
And so on, any help with that please?
shell file text command-line
add a comment |
I have a folder called files
that has 100 files, each one has one value inside;such as: 0.974323
This my code to generate those files and store the single value inside:
DIR="/home/XX/folder"
INPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/eval"
OUTPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/files"
for i in $INPUT_DIR/*
do
groovy $DIR/calculate.groovy $i > $OUTPUT_DIR/${i##*/}_rates.txt
done
That will generate 100 files inside /home/XX/folder/files, but what I want is one single file that has in each line two columns separated by tab contain the score and the name of the file (which is i).
the score t name of the file
So, the output will be:
0.9363728 t resultFile.txt
0.37229 t outFile.txt
And so on, any help with that please?
shell file text command-line
add a comment |
I have a folder called files
that has 100 files, each one has one value inside;such as: 0.974323
This my code to generate those files and store the single value inside:
DIR="/home/XX/folder"
INPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/eval"
OUTPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/files"
for i in $INPUT_DIR/*
do
groovy $DIR/calculate.groovy $i > $OUTPUT_DIR/${i##*/}_rates.txt
done
That will generate 100 files inside /home/XX/folder/files, but what I want is one single file that has in each line two columns separated by tab contain the score and the name of the file (which is i).
the score t name of the file
So, the output will be:
0.9363728 t resultFile.txt
0.37229 t outFile.txt
And so on, any help with that please?
shell file text command-line
I have a folder called files
that has 100 files, each one has one value inside;such as: 0.974323
This my code to generate those files and store the single value inside:
DIR="/home/XX/folder"
INPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/eval"
OUTPUT_DIR="/home/XX/folder/files"
for i in $INPUT_DIR/*
do
groovy $DIR/calculate.groovy $i > $OUTPUT_DIR/${i##*/}_rates.txt
done
That will generate 100 files inside /home/XX/folder/files, but what I want is one single file that has in each line two columns separated by tab contain the score and the name of the file (which is i).
the score t name of the file
So, the output will be:
0.9363728 t resultFile.txt
0.37229 t outFile.txt
And so on, any help with that please?
shell file text command-line
shell file text command-line
asked Nov 15 '18 at 8:30
Sara WaslSara Wasl
957
957
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Assuming your Groovy program outputs just the score, try something like
#!/bin/sh
# ^ use a valid shebang
# Don't use uppercase for variables
dir="/home/XX/folder"
input_dir="/home/XX/folder/eval"
output_dir="/home/XX/folder/files"
# Always use double quotes around file names
for i in "$input_dir"/*
do
groovy "$dir/calculate.groovy" "$i" |
sed "s%^%$it%"
done >"$output_dir"/tabbed_file.txt
The sed
script assumes that the file names do not contain percent signs, and that your sed
recognizes t
as a tab (some variants will think it's just a regular t
with a gratuitous backslash; replace it with a literal tab, or try ctrl-v tab to enter a literal tab at the prompt in many shells).
A much better fix is probably to change your Groovy program so that it accepts an arbitrary number of files as command-line arguments, and includes the file name in the output (perhaps as an option).
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Assuming your Groovy program outputs just the score, try something like
#!/bin/sh
# ^ use a valid shebang
# Don't use uppercase for variables
dir="/home/XX/folder"
input_dir="/home/XX/folder/eval"
output_dir="/home/XX/folder/files"
# Always use double quotes around file names
for i in "$input_dir"/*
do
groovy "$dir/calculate.groovy" "$i" |
sed "s%^%$it%"
done >"$output_dir"/tabbed_file.txt
The sed
script assumes that the file names do not contain percent signs, and that your sed
recognizes t
as a tab (some variants will think it's just a regular t
with a gratuitous backslash; replace it with a literal tab, or try ctrl-v tab to enter a literal tab at the prompt in many shells).
A much better fix is probably to change your Groovy program so that it accepts an arbitrary number of files as command-line arguments, and includes the file name in the output (perhaps as an option).
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
add a comment |
Assuming your Groovy program outputs just the score, try something like
#!/bin/sh
# ^ use a valid shebang
# Don't use uppercase for variables
dir="/home/XX/folder"
input_dir="/home/XX/folder/eval"
output_dir="/home/XX/folder/files"
# Always use double quotes around file names
for i in "$input_dir"/*
do
groovy "$dir/calculate.groovy" "$i" |
sed "s%^%$it%"
done >"$output_dir"/tabbed_file.txt
The sed
script assumes that the file names do not contain percent signs, and that your sed
recognizes t
as a tab (some variants will think it's just a regular t
with a gratuitous backslash; replace it with a literal tab, or try ctrl-v tab to enter a literal tab at the prompt in many shells).
A much better fix is probably to change your Groovy program so that it accepts an arbitrary number of files as command-line arguments, and includes the file name in the output (perhaps as an option).
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
add a comment |
Assuming your Groovy program outputs just the score, try something like
#!/bin/sh
# ^ use a valid shebang
# Don't use uppercase for variables
dir="/home/XX/folder"
input_dir="/home/XX/folder/eval"
output_dir="/home/XX/folder/files"
# Always use double quotes around file names
for i in "$input_dir"/*
do
groovy "$dir/calculate.groovy" "$i" |
sed "s%^%$it%"
done >"$output_dir"/tabbed_file.txt
The sed
script assumes that the file names do not contain percent signs, and that your sed
recognizes t
as a tab (some variants will think it's just a regular t
with a gratuitous backslash; replace it with a literal tab, or try ctrl-v tab to enter a literal tab at the prompt in many shells).
A much better fix is probably to change your Groovy program so that it accepts an arbitrary number of files as command-line arguments, and includes the file name in the output (perhaps as an option).
Assuming your Groovy program outputs just the score, try something like
#!/bin/sh
# ^ use a valid shebang
# Don't use uppercase for variables
dir="/home/XX/folder"
input_dir="/home/XX/folder/eval"
output_dir="/home/XX/folder/files"
# Always use double quotes around file names
for i in "$input_dir"/*
do
groovy "$dir/calculate.groovy" "$i" |
sed "s%^%$it%"
done >"$output_dir"/tabbed_file.txt
The sed
script assumes that the file names do not contain percent signs, and that your sed
recognizes t
as a tab (some variants will think it's just a regular t
with a gratuitous backslash; replace it with a literal tab, or try ctrl-v tab to enter a literal tab at the prompt in many shells).
A much better fix is probably to change your Groovy program so that it accepts an arbitrary number of files as command-line arguments, and includes the file name in the output (perhaps as an option).
answered Nov 15 '18 at 8:40
tripleeetripleee
93.4k13130184
93.4k13130184
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
add a comment |
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
Regarding uppercase vs lowercase for variables, see stackoverflow.com/questions/673055/…
– tripleee
Nov 15 '18 at 8:42
add a comment |
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