From: hadi motamedi <[email protected]>
>Sorry . I tried for "#diff -y" but its output seems to have a comparison
>between the two files in line-by-line basis . As you mentioned , if the row#1
>in file1 is in match with say row#5 in file2 I want it not to be considered as
>a difference. But the the output shows it as if it is being considered as a
>difference. Please correct me .
Could you be more precise when you say "compare"...?
By example, to get matching lines, you could:
cat $FILE1 $FILE2 | sort | uniq -c | ...
You'd get each line preceded by the number of occurence; then grep what you
want...
JD
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