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NUMDIFF(1) |
User Commands |
NUMDIFF(1) |
numdiff - compare similar files with numeric fields
Usage: numdiff -h|--help|-v|--version or
numdiff [-s IFS][-D DELIMS][-a THRVAL[:RANGE|:RANGE1:RANGE2]][-r
THRVAL[:RANGE|:RANGE1:RANGE2]][-2][-F NUM][-# NUM][-P][-N][-I][-c
CURRNAME][-d C1C2][-t C1C2][-g N1N2][-p C1C2][-n C1C2][-e C1C2][-i C1C2][-X
1:RANGE][-X 2:RANGE][-E][-U][-b][-V][-O[NUM]][--raw][-q][-S][-z 1:RANGE][-z
2:RANGE][-Z 1:RANGE][-Z 2:RANGE][-m][-H][-f[NUM]][-T][-B][-l PATH][-o PATH]
FILE1 FILE2
Compare putatively similar files line by line and field by field,
ignoring small numeric differences or/and different numeric formats.
RANGE, RANGE1 and RANGE2 stay for a positive integer value or for
a range of integer values, like 1-, 3-5 or -7. The two arguments
after the options are the names of the files to compare. The complete paths
of the files should be given, a directory name is not accepted. The given
paths cannot refer to the same file but one of them can be "-",
which refers to stdin.
Exit status: 1 if files differ, 0 if they are equal, -1
(255) in case of error
-s, --separators=IFS
- Specify the set of characters to use as delimiters while splitting the
input lines into fields (The default set of delimiters is space, tab and
newline). If IFS is prefixed with 1: or 2:, use the given delimiter set
only for the lines from the first or the second file respectively
-D, --delimiters=DELIMS
- Specify the set of strings to use as delimiters while splitting the input
lines into fields (The default set of delimiters is space, tab and
newline). If DELIMS is prefixed with 1: or 2:, use the given delimiter set
only for the lines from the first or the second file respectively
-a,
--absolute-tolerance=THRVAL[:RANGE|:RANGE1:RANGE2]
- Set to THRVAL the maximum absolute difference permitted before two numeric
fields are regarded as different (The default value is zero). If a RANGE
is given, use the specified threshold only when comparing fields whose
positions lie in RANGE. If both RANGE1 and RANGE2 are given and have the
same length, then use the specified threshold when comparing a field of
FILE1 lying in RANGE1 with the corresponding field of FILE2 in RANGE2
-r,
--relative-tolerance=THRVAL[:RANGE|:RANGE1:RANGE2]
- Set to THRVAL the maximum relative difference permitted before two numeric
fields are regarded as different (The default value is zero). If a RANGE
is given, use the specified threshold only when comparing fields whose
positions lie in RANGE. If both RANGE1 and RANGE2 are given and have the
same length, then use the specified threshold when comparing a field of
FILE1 lying in RANGE1 with the corresponding field of FILE2 in RANGE2
-2, --strict
- Consider two numerical values as equal only if both absolute and relative
difference do not exceed the respective tolerance threshold
-F, --formula=NUM
- Use the formula indicated by NUM to compute the relative errors. If 'NUM'
is 0 use the classic formula. If 'NUM' is 1 compute the relative errors by
considering the values in FILE1 as sample values. If 'NUM' is 2 compute
the relative errors by considering the values in FILE2 as sample
values.
-#, --digits=NUM
- Set to NUM the number of digits in the significands used in multiple
precision arithmetic
-P, --positive-differences
- Ignore all differences due to numeric fields of the second file that are
less than the corresponding numeric fields in the first file
-N, --negative-differences
- Ignore all differences due to numeric fields of the second file that are
greater than the corresponding numeric fields in the first file
-I, --ignore-case
- Ignore changes in case while doing literal comparisons
-c, --currency=CURRNAME
- Set to CURRNAME the currency name for the two files to compare. CURRNAME
must be prefixed with 1: or 2: to specify the currency name only for the
first or the second file
-d, --decimal-point=C1C2
- Specify the characters representing the decimal point in the two files to
compare
-t, --thousands-separator=C1C2
- Specify the characters representing the thousands separator in the two
files to compare
-g, --group-length=N1N2
- Specify the number of digits forming each group of thousands in the two
files to compare
-p, --plus-prefix=C1C2
- Specify the (optional) prefixes for positive values used in the two files
to compare
-n, --minus-prefix=C1C2
- Specify the prefixes for negative values used in the two files to
compare
-e, --exponent-letter=C1C2
- Specify the exponent letters used in the two files to compare
-i, --imaginary-unit=C1C2
- Specify the characters representing the imaginary unit in the two files to
compare
-X, --exclude=1:RANGE
- Select the fields of the first file that have to be ignored
-X, --exclude=2:RANGE
- Select the fields of the second file that have to be ignored
-E, --essential
- While printing the differences between the two compared files show only
the numerical ones
-U, --dummy
- While printing the differences between the two compared files neglect all
the numerical ones (dummy mode)
-b, --brief
- Suppress all messages concerning the differences discovered in the
structures of the two files
-V, --verbose
- For every couple of lines which differ in at least one field print an
header to show how these lines appear in the two compared files
-O, --overview[=NUM]
- Display a side by side difference listing of the two files showing which
lines are present only in one file, which lines are present in both files
but with one or more differing fields, and which lines are identical. If
'NUM' is zero or is not specified, output at most 130 columns per line. If
'NUM' is a positive number, output at most 'NUM' columns per line. If
'NUM' is a negative number, do not output common lines and display at most
-'NUM' columns per line.
--raw
- Display the differences between the two compared files in raw format (not
very convenient for humans)
-q, --quiet, --silent
- Suppress all the standard output
-S, --statistics
- Add some statistics to the standard output
-z, --blur-if-numerical=1:RANGE
- Select the fields of the first file that have to be blurred during the
synchronization procedure only if they turn out to be numeric
-z, --blur-if-numerical=2:RANGE
- Select the fields of the second file that have to be blurred during the
synchronization procedure only if they turn out to be numeric
-Z, --blur-unconditionally=1:RANGE
- Select the fields of the first file that have to be unconditionally
blurred during the synchronization procedure
-Z, --blur-unconditionally=2:RANGE
- Select the fields of the second file that have to be unconditionally
blurred during the synchronization procedure
-m, --minimal
- During synchronization try hard to find a smaller set of changes
-H, --speed-large-files
- During synchronization assume large files and many scattered small
changes
-f, --test-filter[=NUM]
- Run only the filter and then show the results of its attempt to
synchronize the two files. If 'NUM' is zero or is not specified, output at
most 130 columns per line. If 'NUM' is a positive number, output at most
'NUM' columns per line. If 'NUM' is a negative number, do not output
common lines and display at most -'NUM' columns per line.
-T, --expand-tabs
- Expand tabs to spaces in output while displaying the results of the
synchronization procedure (meaningful only together with option -O
or -f)
-B, --binary
- Treat both files as binary files (only meaningful under Doz/Windoz)
-l, --warnings-to=PATH
- Redirect warning and error messages from stderr to the indicated file
-o, --output=PATH
- Redirect output from stdout to the indicated file
-h, --help
- Show help message and predefined settings
-v, --version
- Show version number, Copyright, Distribution Terms and NO-Warranty
Currency name = ""
Decimal point = `.'
Thousands separator = `,'
Number of digits in each thousands group = 3
Leading positive sign = `+'
Leading negative sign = `-'
Prefix for decimal exponent = `e'
Symbol used to denote the imaginary unit = `i'
Copyright © 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014,
2015, 2016, 2017 Ivano Primi <ivprimi@libero.it>
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later, see
<http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO
WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
The full documentation for numdiff is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If
the info and numdiff programs are properly installed at your
site, the command
- info numdiff
should give you access to the complete manual.
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