I need a one-liner (that I can put in a dos batch file), preferably using a unix command like AWK or JOIN. The function I need is essentially a more elaborate version of the following JOIN command:
join -j 1 -a 1 file1.txt file2.txt -t "^" > output.txt
[walkthrough: field separators are "^", join key is 1st field of both fields, and not exactly sure what the "-a 1" is doing exactly but it is sticking the bit-to-be joined on the end of the row of the other file, which is what I want.
Now, this one-liner works fine where both files are sorted and there is only one matching line in the 2nd file ... but I need it to try to match up to 4 lines in the 2nd file.
E.g.
file1:
12^blahblah
13^blahblahblahblah
14^blahblahblahblahblahblahblahblah
file2:
12^banana
12^orange
12^apple
13^potato
14^tomato
So I want the output like this:
12^blahblah^banana,orange,apple
13^blahblahblahblah^potato
14^blahblahblahblahblahblahblahblah^tomato
[Doesn't have to be a comma separating the new items]
Doesn't have to be a comma separating the new items
- Why bring up commas at all? Have you had a problem in the past with commands spuriously injecting commas in your text?