Use sort
and sed
:
sort -u input.file | sed "s/.*/'&',()(now,/"
Which, it has to be said, is a pretty weird string to concatenate onto the end of anything.
The reason the shell prompt changes to '>
' is that it thinks you've not completed the
command. It is called the secondary prompt, and is settable via the $PS2 variable. For example, if I typed:
$ sort -u input.file |
> sed "s/.*/'&',()(now,/"
'9842901121',()(now,
'9942501133',()(now,
'9942501199',()(now,
$
When I hit return after the pipe symbol, the shell knows the command is incomplete so it asks for the rest of the input - the sed command in this case.
I used the quotes - double quotes this time - around the sed script to tell the shell where the argument ends. Without those, I get a syntax error, but it is conceivable that the shell would misunderstand things and think the command was incomplete. I normally use single quotes around regex strings; there's less to worry about on the whole. But this time, the replacement text contained single quotes, and then using single quote around the whole string requires:
sort -u input.file | sed 's/.*/'\''&'\'',()(now,/'
which is much harder to write, and read, than the double-quoted version.
From the comments:
cat inputfile.txt | sort | uniq > Inputfile.txt
awk -F" " ' {print (echo ""$1" ,()(now,")}' Inputfile1.txt
In the above command I cannot add '
before and after the number but others work fine.
- Please don't abuse
cat
.
- Please remember that
sort -u
is quicker than sort | uniq
.
- FYI: There are case-insensitive file systems in the world.
- Maybe you had a typo for Inputfile1.txt.
- Unless you need the intermediate file, simply pipe the output from the sort phase into the 'mangle' phase.
- As I noted in my main answer, you have to be very careful with quotes, especially when you want to print them.
- The
-F
option to awk
is only needed when you have multiple fields on a line and the separator is not 'white space' (blanks or tabs).
Using awk
instead of sed
is perfectly feasible; we just need to be careful with the quotes. The trouble is, the awk
script itself needs to include both single and double quotes, which means you have to be ultra-careful. I recommend using sed
because you don't have to get both single and double quotes into the script.
sort -u inputfile.txt |
awk '{printf "'\''%s'\'',()(now,\n", $0}'
The first single-quote starts a single-quoted string; there are no special characters in a single-quoted string and the first following single quote terminates it. So, the first double quote is just a regular character. The second single quote is the start of a sequence to remember: '\''
. The first of these single quotes terminates the current single-quoted string; the backslash single-quote combo embeds a single quote into the string; the third single-quote in the sequence starts a new single-quoted string. After that, the "%s" is part of the string, then there's another of '\''
sequences to get another single quote into the script; then there is the rest of a printf()
format string, followed by a final single quote. By enclosing things in single quotes, we don't have to worry about escaping double quotes, backticks, backslashes and dollar signs in the string. The net result is that awk
sees the program text:
{printf "'%s',()(now,\n", $0}
which prints the input data with single quotes around it and the ',()(now,
' sequence after it, ending with a newline.
Can you write that with double quotes around the program? Yes, of course you can:
sort -u inputfile.txt |
awk "{printf \"'%s',()(now,\\n\", \$0}"
This is actually two characters shorter than the single quoted version, but there were more opportunities to get it wrong. With single quotes, all I need to do is replace each single quote that should appear in the script with the '\''
sequence; with double quotes, I have to worry about escaping the other special characters too.
A good understanding of single quotes and double quotes is very, very important for shell programming. So too is a clear understanding of which parts of the script are related to the shell sees and which parts are related to what the command (awk
in this example, or sed
or perl
or ...) sees.