You're right, my locale is set to fr_FR. I've tried with en_EN and
en_US, and it works fine (and with -k1,1 too).
I think I understand the problem with the locale fr_FR : in french, to
write 123456.78 in a easily readable form you write 123 456,78 (and in
english it's 123,456.78).
Thanks Phili
Bauke Jan Douma wrote:
> What might have been the case here, and which is a
> situation that I find myself in sometimes, is this:
> you want to do 'filter1 FILE | filter2'
> (or 'filter1 isn't what's to be expected. You investigate, and
> part of that is temporarily substituting filter1 for
> pla
Andreas Schwab wrote on 10-03-08 19:54:
Damien ANCELIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
I met a problem with the sort command : I've used the uniq command with
the -c option to count some numbers, and then applying sort -n don't sort
lines by numeric order of the first field.
Here is an example (my
Damien ANCELIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I met a problem with the sort command : I've used the uniq command with
> the -c option to count some numbers, and then applying sort -n don't sort
> lines by numeric order of the first field.
> Here is an example (my sort version is 5.97) :
> $ cat bug
On Mon, 10 Mar 2008, Damien ANCELIN wrote:
I met a problem with the sort command : I've used the uniq command with the -c
option to count some numbers, and then applying sort -n don't sort lines by
numeric order of the first field.
Here is an example (my sort version is 5.97) :
$ cat bug_sort
Hello,
I met a problem with the sort command : I've used the uniq command with
the -c option to count some numbers, and then applying sort -n don't
sort lines by numeric order of the first field.
Here is an example (my sort version is 5.97) :
$ cat bug_sort | sort -n
1320 51970
1692 12345