dbfilealter - alter the format of an Fsdb file, changing the row/column¶
NOTE: this page was directly converted from the perl FSDB manual pages from FSDB version 3.1
SYNOPSIS¶
dbfilealter [-c] [-F fs] [-R rs] [-Z compression] [column…]
DESCRIPTION¶
This program reformats a Fsdb file, altering the row (-R rs) or
column (-F fs) separator. It verifies that this action does not
violate the file constraints (for example, if spaces appear in data and
the new format has space as a separator), and optionally corrects
things.
With -Z compression it controls compression on the file
OPTIONS¶
- -F or –fs or –fieldseparator S
Specify the field (column) separator as
S. See below for valid field separators.- -R or –rs or –rowseparator S
Specify the row separator as
S. See below for valid row separators.- -Z or –compression S
Specify file compression as given by file extension
S. Supported compressions are gz for gzip, bz2 for bzip2, xz for xz, or none or undef to disable compression. Default is none.- -c or –correct
Correct any inconsistency caused by the new separators, if possible.
This module also supports the standard fsdb options:
- -d
Enable debugging output.
- -i or –input InputSource
Read from InputSource, typically a file name, or
-for standard input, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.- -o or –output OutputDestination
Write to OutputDestination, typically a file name, or
-for standard output, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.- –autorun or –noautorun
By default, programs process automatically, but Fsdb::Filter objects in Perl do not run until you invoke the run() method. The
--(no)autorunoption controls that behavior within Perl.
- --help
Show help.
- --man
Show full manual.
Valid Field Separators¶
D default: any amount of whitespace on input, tabs on output.
s single space (exactly one space for input and output).
S double space on output; two or more spaces on input.
t single tab character (exactly one tab for input and output).
XN take N as one or more hex digits that specify a unicode character. Accept one or more of those characters on input, output exactly one of those characters.
CA take A as a one (unicode) literal character. Accept one or more of those characters on input, output exactly one of those characters.
Potentially in the future xN and cA will support
single-character-on-input equivalents of XN and <CA>.
Valid Row Seperators¶
Three row separators are allowed:
D the default, one line per row
C complete rowized. Each line is a field-labeled and its value, and a blank line separates “rows”. All fields present in the output.
I incompletely rowized. Like “C”, but null fields are omitted from the output.
SAMPLE USAGE¶
Input:¶
#fsdb name id test1 a 1 80 b 2 70 c 3 65
Command:¶
cat data.fsdb | dbfilealter -F S
Output:¶
#fsdb -F S name id test1 a 1 80 b 2 70 c 3 65 # | dbfilealter -F S
Command 2:¶
cat data.fsdb | dbfilealter -R C
Output:¶
#fsdb -R C name id test1 name: a id: 1 test1: 80 name: b id: 2 test1: 70 name: c id: 3 test1: 65 # | dbfilealter -R C
Correction mode input:¶
#fsdb -F S name id test1 a student 1 80 b nice 2 70 c all 3 65
Correction mode command:¶
cat correction.fsdb | dbfilealter -c -F D
Correction mode output:¶
#fsdb name id test1 a_student 1 80 b_nice 2 70 c_all 3 65 # | dbfilealter -c -F D
SEE ALSO¶
Fsdb, dbcoldefine.