This is to announce datamash-1.8, a new release.
Datamash is a command-line program which performs basic numeric, textual and
statistical operations on input textual data.
This is the first release for new maintainer Tim Rice, with much appreciation
to Shawn Wagner and Erik Auerswald for their help. See the AUTHORS and THANKS
files for additional credits and acknowledgements.
GNU Datamash home page:
https://www.gnu.org/software/datamash/
Please report any problem you may experience to the bug-datamash@gnu.org
mailing list.
Happy Hacking!
– Tim Rice
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Here are the compressed sources and a GPG detached signature[*]:
https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/datamash/datamash-1.8.tar.gz
https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/datamash/datamash-1.8.tar.gz.sig
Use a mirror for higher download bandwidth:
https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/datamash/datamash-1.8.tar.gz
https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/datamash/datamash-1.8.tar.gz.sig
[*] Use a .sig file to verify that the corresponding file (without the
.sig suffix) is intact. For instructions about how to do this, please
refer to https://ftp.gnu.org/README. (In particular you will need to
retrieve the GNU keyring rather than using any keyservers.)
==================================================================
The checksums of the archive are:
$ sha1sum datamash-1.8.tar.gz
e77e15ed2c6b17b4045251fd87f16430c3bf2166 datamash-1.8.tar.gz
$ sha256sum datamash-1.8.tar.gz
94a4e11819ad259aa3745b7eca392e385e3a676d276e8cbb616269dbbb17fe6d datamash-1.8.tar.gz
$ b2sum datamash-1.8.tar.gz
dfe4060ea65ea46a1796e01463fd9b0e55c2d633d06da153f585a3a569acf3e9211a14cb3905daf8ecae347358daa04db940d557b909f0ce5ebbba2f57d3a410 datamash-1.8.tar.gz
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NEWS
- Noteworthy changes in release 1.8 (2022-07-23) [stable]
-
- Changes in Behavior
Schedule -f/–full combined with non-linewise operations for deprecation.
In a future release, -f/–full will only be usable with operations where
it makes sense. For now, we print a warning to stderr when -f/–full is
used with non-linewise operations, and such usage will no longer be
supported.
The bin operation now uses more intuitive bins. Previously, a command
such as `datamash bin 1 <<< -0` would output -100; and -100 did not fall
in its own bin. We now require all bins to take the form `[nx,(n+1)x)`
with integer n and bin width x. We discard the sign on -0 and gate such
inputs into the [0,x) bin.
Operations taking more than one argument now provide more complete output
with –header-out. Previously, an operation such as `pcov x:y` would
produce an output header like `pcov(y)`, discarding the `x`. The new
behavior will output header `pcov(x,y)`.
datamash(1) no longer ignores –output-delimiter with the rmdup operation.
-
- New Features
New datamash option –sort-cmd argument to specify the program used
by the -s option to sort input, plus enhancements to the security and
portability of building sort command lines.
New datamash option -c/–collapse-delimiter=X argument uses character
X instead of comma between values in collapse and unique lists.
New datamash operations: mean square (ms) and root mean square (rms).
Decorate now supports sorting IP addresses of both versions 4 and 6
together. IPv4 addresses are logically converted to IPv6 addresses,
either as IPv4-Mapped (ipv6v4map) or IPv4-Compatible (ipv6v4comp)
addresses.
Add two command aliases:
‘echo’ may now be used instead of ‘cut’.
‘uniq’ may now be used instead of ‘unique’.
-
- Improvements
Updated the bash completion script to reflect recent additions.
-
- Bug Fixes
Datamash now passes the -z/–zero-terminated flag to the sort(1) child
process when used with “–sort –zero-terminated”. Additionally,
if the system’s sort(1) does not support -z, datamash reports the error
and exits. Previously it would omit the “-z” when running sort(1),
resulting in incorrect results.
Documentation fixes and spelling corrections.
Incorrect format in a decorate(1) error breaking compilation on some
systems.
datamash(1), decorate(1): Fix some minor memory leaks.
datamash(1) no longer crashes when the unique or countunique operations
are used with input data containing NUL bytes. The problem was reported
in https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-datamash/2020-11/msg00001.html
by Catalin Patulea.
datamash(1) no longer crashes when crosstab with –header-in is called
by field name instead of index. I.e. `datamash –header-in ct x,y` now
works as expected.