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I would like to concatenate several tables and just keeping the header in the first line (and thus not having a new header each time that a new table has been concatenate). Does anyone know how to do that?

I am currently using:

find "/dir/folder" name "*.dat" -exec cat {} + >> "/dir/folder/table.txt"

but I can get rid of the header with that.

4 Answers 4

4

With a BSD/GNU sed:

find "/dir/folder" -name "*.dat" -exec sed -se1d {} + >> "/dir/folder/table.txt"

...which instructs to treat all input files separately, and for each to delete the 1st line.

If the header isn't already in table.txt, you should first put it there, though:

set -- /dir/folder/*.dat
head -n1 <"$1" >>/dir/folder/table.txt
find ...

If all of the *.dat matches are in child directories, that won't work though.

{   find /dir/folder -name \*.dat -exec \
         sh -c 'head -n1 "$0"; kill "$PPID"' {} \;
    find /dir/folder -name \*.dat -exec sed -se1d {} +
}   >>/dir/folder/table.txt

That should.

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  • This doesn't keep the first header as OP want.
    – cuonglm
    Aug 3, 2015 at 13:25
  • @cuonglm, I was just putting that in.
    – mikeserv
    Aug 3, 2015 at 13:27
  • That´s close to be ok, just the header is now gone! Even so I have put the set -- /dir/folder/*.dat head -n1 <"$1" >>/dir/folder/table.txt find "/dir/folder" name "*.dat" -exec sed -se1d {} + >> "/dir/folder/table.txt" Do you have any idea why?
    – steve
    Aug 3, 2015 at 14:49
  • @steve - Nope, not really - it should work as long as there is at least one file which matches *.dat and the first of these contains your header on the first line in the folder /dir/folder/. If all if the *.dat files are in child directories, though, you'll need to glob one of those, I guess.
    – mikeserv
    Aug 3, 2015 at 14:57
  • @steve - that edit should work.
    – mikeserv
    Aug 3, 2015 at 15:04
2

If the header is on one line, with GNU tail:

find "/dir/folder" -name "*.dat" -exec tail -qn +2 {} +

POSIXly, you'd need to run one tail per file:

To preserve the header of the first file, GNUly:

find "/dir/folder" -name "*.dat" -print0 | {
   IFS= read -rd '' first &&
     cat "$first" &&
     xargs -r0 tail -qn +2
}
2
  • I think I have been unclear because none of those answer work. In fact I have thousand of tables in several subfolder within a directory from the root directory I want to access those tables and create a new one grouping all the tables from the subfolder and just having one header in the first line. Thank you very much for your answers!
    – steve
    Aug 3, 2015 at 13:52
  • @steve, that solution outputs files starting at their second line. You can then append that to a file that already contains the header. Aug 3, 2015 at 14:14
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If all your files can be fit in to one awk invocation:

find "/dir/folder" name "*.dat" -exec awk 'FNR == 1 && NR != 1 {next};1' {} + 
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  • It´s not really working. Could you learn me what´s the meaning of ['FNR == 1 && NR != 1 {next};1'] ?
    – steve
    Aug 3, 2015 at 13:55
  • @steve: Yes, like I said, it only works when all your files fit in one awk invocation. FNR == 1 mean the first line of file, NR != 1 mean we aren't at the first line of first file. FNR == 1 && NR != 1 is true when we are at the first line of each files start at second one, if we are here, next skip that line.
    – cuonglm
    Aug 3, 2015 at 14:01
  • Why downvote here?
    – cuonglm
    Aug 3, 2015 at 14:24
0

tail allow you to skip given number of lines:

find "/dir/folder" name "*.dat" -exec tail +2 {} + >> "/dir/folder/table.txt"
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