For example, I might want to:
tail -f logfile | grep org.springframework | <command to remove first N characters>
I was thinking that tr
might have the ability to do this but I'm not sure.
Use cut
. Eg. to strip the first 4 characters of each line (i.e. start on the 5th char):
tail -f logfile | grep org.springframework | cut -c 5-
grep --line-buffered "org.springframework
to solve that issue.
Jul 7, 2014 at 22:25
sed 's/^.\{5\}//' logfile
and you replace 5 by the number you want...it should do the trick...
EDIT
if for each line
sed 's/^.\{5\}//g' logfile
You can use cut
:
cut -c N- file.txt > new_file.txt
-c:
characters
file.txt:
input file
new_file.txt:
output file
N-:
Characters from N to end to be cut and output to the new file.
Can also have other args like: 'N' , 'N-M', '-M' meaning nth character, nth to mth character, first to mth character respectively.
This will perform the operation to each line of the input file.
Here is simple function, tested in bash. 1st param of function is string, 2nd param is number of characters to be stripped
function stringStripNCharsFromStart {
echo ${1:$2:${#1}}
}
Usage:
$ stringStripNCharsFromStart "12abcdefgh-" 2
# 2abcdefgh-
Screenshot:
tail -f logfile | grep org.springframework | cut -c 900-
would remove the first 900 characters
cut
uses 900- to show the 900th character to the end of the line
however when I pipe all of this through grep I don't get anything
I think awk
would be the best tool for this as it can both filter and perform the necessary string manipulation functions on filtered lines:
tail -f logfile | awk '/org.springframework/ {print substr($0, 6)}'
or
tail -f logfile | awk '/org.springframework/ && sub(/^.{5}/,"",$0)'