Find and copy text from one file to another [duplicate]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












4
















This question already has an answer here:



  • How to delete whole text from the beginning of a line with a certain string

    3 answers



My goal is to extract text from a specific line with a hotword (don't know how to call it else) in it. The line number can vary because its an weekly updated file. When hotword is detected it should copy this line and all following text to another file.



Could this be done by sed, awk or something else?










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by Jeff Schaller, RalfFriedl, msp9011, Archemar, elbarna Jan 24 at 2:45


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 1





    Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 21 at 23:35















4
















This question already has an answer here:



  • How to delete whole text from the beginning of a line with a certain string

    3 answers



My goal is to extract text from a specific line with a hotword (don't know how to call it else) in it. The line number can vary because its an weekly updated file. When hotword is detected it should copy this line and all following text to another file.



Could this be done by sed, awk or something else?










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by Jeff Schaller, RalfFriedl, msp9011, Archemar, elbarna Jan 24 at 2:45


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 1





    Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 21 at 23:35













4












4








4


0







This question already has an answer here:



  • How to delete whole text from the beginning of a line with a certain string

    3 answers



My goal is to extract text from a specific line with a hotword (don't know how to call it else) in it. The line number can vary because its an weekly updated file. When hotword is detected it should copy this line and all following text to another file.



Could this be done by sed, awk or something else?










share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • How to delete whole text from the beginning of a line with a certain string

    3 answers



My goal is to extract text from a specific line with a hotword (don't know how to call it else) in it. The line number can vary because its an weekly updated file. When hotword is detected it should copy this line and all following text to another file.



Could this be done by sed, awk or something else?





This question already has an answer here:



  • How to delete whole text from the beginning of a line with a certain string

    3 answers







shell-script






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











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share|improve this question










asked Jan 21 at 23:16









diggidrediggidre

384




384




marked as duplicate by Jeff Schaller, RalfFriedl, msp9011, Archemar, elbarna Jan 24 at 2:45


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Jeff Schaller, RalfFriedl, msp9011, Archemar, elbarna Jan 24 at 2:45


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 1





    Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 21 at 23:35












  • 1





    Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 21 at 23:35







1




1





Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

– Nasir Riley
Jan 21 at 23:35





Provide an example of the text, indicate the word that you are looking for, and give the expected output.

– Nasir Riley
Jan 21 at 23:35










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















9














grep -A 10 can be used to print the line with the matching word and ten lines after (you can substitute 10 with whatever number you want) but as you haven't indicated how many lines are in the file, you can use the following instead:



sed -n '/word/,$p' file >> file2


That will print the line with the word and all of the lines afterwords and then append them to another file. This way, you don't have to account for the total number of lines if the file contains a large number of lines such as 1,000 or more.






share|improve this answer

























  • OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

    – diggidre
    Jan 22 at 9:33












  • @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 22 at 12:29



















3














grep -A $(< $A wc -l) hotword $A >> $B





share|improve this answer

























  • And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

    – Psychonaut
    Jan 22 at 8:36











  • @Psychonaut. Fixed.

    – user1133275
    Jan 22 at 12:43


















0














Another option is to use awk:



awk "/word/, 0" infile >outfile


This copies the range of lines starting from the first one containing ‘word’, and ending never (hence the 0).






share|improve this answer





























    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    9














    grep -A 10 can be used to print the line with the matching word and ten lines after (you can substitute 10 with whatever number you want) but as you haven't indicated how many lines are in the file, you can use the following instead:



    sed -n '/word/,$p' file >> file2


    That will print the line with the word and all of the lines afterwords and then append them to another file. This way, you don't have to account for the total number of lines if the file contains a large number of lines such as 1,000 or more.






    share|improve this answer

























    • OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

      – diggidre
      Jan 22 at 9:33












    • @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

      – Nasir Riley
      Jan 22 at 12:29
















    9














    grep -A 10 can be used to print the line with the matching word and ten lines after (you can substitute 10 with whatever number you want) but as you haven't indicated how many lines are in the file, you can use the following instead:



    sed -n '/word/,$p' file >> file2


    That will print the line with the word and all of the lines afterwords and then append them to another file. This way, you don't have to account for the total number of lines if the file contains a large number of lines such as 1,000 or more.






    share|improve this answer

























    • OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

      – diggidre
      Jan 22 at 9:33












    • @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

      – Nasir Riley
      Jan 22 at 12:29














    9












    9








    9







    grep -A 10 can be used to print the line with the matching word and ten lines after (you can substitute 10 with whatever number you want) but as you haven't indicated how many lines are in the file, you can use the following instead:



    sed -n '/word/,$p' file >> file2


    That will print the line with the word and all of the lines afterwords and then append them to another file. This way, you don't have to account for the total number of lines if the file contains a large number of lines such as 1,000 or more.






    share|improve this answer















    grep -A 10 can be used to print the line with the matching word and ten lines after (you can substitute 10 with whatever number you want) but as you haven't indicated how many lines are in the file, you can use the following instead:



    sed -n '/word/,$p' file >> file2


    That will print the line with the word and all of the lines afterwords and then append them to another file. This way, you don't have to account for the total number of lines if the file contains a large number of lines such as 1,000 or more.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jan 22 at 0:11

























    answered Jan 22 at 0:05









    Nasir RileyNasir Riley

    2,654249




    2,654249












    • OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

      – diggidre
      Jan 22 at 9:33












    • @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

      – Nasir Riley
      Jan 22 at 12:29


















    • OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

      – diggidre
      Jan 22 at 9:33












    • @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

      – Nasir Riley
      Jan 22 at 12:29

















    OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

    – diggidre
    Jan 22 at 9:33






    OK thx that's great. Is there a way not to copy the text lines but to cut them out. is that possible in just one command or do i have to purge after i copied text with sed?

    – diggidre
    Jan 22 at 9:33














    @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 22 at 12:29






    @diggidre Do you mean that you just want to send them standard output as in only having them appear onscreen or do you mean that you just want to remove them from the file?

    – Nasir Riley
    Jan 22 at 12:29














    3














    grep -A $(< $A wc -l) hotword $A >> $B





    share|improve this answer

























    • And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

      – Psychonaut
      Jan 22 at 8:36











    • @Psychonaut. Fixed.

      – user1133275
      Jan 22 at 12:43















    3














    grep -A $(< $A wc -l) hotword $A >> $B





    share|improve this answer

























    • And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

      – Psychonaut
      Jan 22 at 8:36











    • @Psychonaut. Fixed.

      – user1133275
      Jan 22 at 12:43













    3












    3








    3







    grep -A $(< $A wc -l) hotword $A >> $B





    share|improve this answer















    grep -A $(< $A wc -l) hotword $A >> $B






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jan 22 at 12:43

























    answered Jan 21 at 23:43









    user1133275user1133275

    3,282723




    3,282723












    • And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

      – Psychonaut
      Jan 22 at 8:36











    • @Psychonaut. Fixed.

      – user1133275
      Jan 22 at 12:43

















    • And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

      – Psychonaut
      Jan 22 at 8:36











    • @Psychonaut. Fixed.

      – user1133275
      Jan 22 at 12:43
















    And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

    – Psychonaut
    Jan 22 at 8:36





    And what if the file contains more than 99 lines after the hotword?

    – Psychonaut
    Jan 22 at 8:36













    @Psychonaut. Fixed.

    – user1133275
    Jan 22 at 12:43





    @Psychonaut. Fixed.

    – user1133275
    Jan 22 at 12:43











    0














    Another option is to use awk:



    awk "/word/, 0" infile >outfile


    This copies the range of lines starting from the first one containing ‘word’, and ending never (hence the 0).






    share|improve this answer



























      0














      Another option is to use awk:



      awk "/word/, 0" infile >outfile


      This copies the range of lines starting from the first one containing ‘word’, and ending never (hence the 0).






      share|improve this answer

























        0












        0








        0







        Another option is to use awk:



        awk "/word/, 0" infile >outfile


        This copies the range of lines starting from the first one containing ‘word’, and ending never (hence the 0).






        share|improve this answer













        Another option is to use awk:



        awk "/word/, 0" infile >outfile


        This copies the range of lines starting from the first one containing ‘word’, and ending never (hence the 0).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 23 at 10:16









        giddsgidds

        1012




        1012












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