I have several image files accumulated as a result of taking screenshots. I want to merge all of them into a single pdf file. How can I do that? I save webpages in .mht format using UnMHT addon in firefox. Is there any way to merge several mht files into a single pdf?
My laptop has 80GB HDD Space, and sometime ago I installed fedora 13 inside windows with 15 gb space for it. Now, I have removed windows and the disk space is recovered. So the disk space is split up like this. 15GB for Linux + 42GB + 21 GB. I just want to know whether I can extend this 15gb so that the full of 80GB can be used without having to mount it. Or in other words can I remove the partition and make it into one single drive.
I have a book in html format, archived into one zip file. Starting from "index.html" there are links to the chapters, from there to sections, etc...I'd like to make a single pdf so I can annotate it with Okular.
I have found many tools to convert a *single* html page into pdf. But none yet that is also able to follow links between the pages in order to create a single document out of it. It would be nice if the links could be preserved. But getting it all into a neat pdf is really the most important.
I am using ffmpeg for merge wav files to a mov video. My doing is below
1. First extract audio (wav file) from video 2. Create wav file from mp3 track 1 3. Create wav file from mp3 track 2 4 Merge extract audio from video with track 1 and track2. Now finally create a new video with original video's video stream and merged audio stream.
Process is working. However final video is 3-4 times greater than original one. I want that final video should be near about size of original video. As I understand, all three wav files (created from ) make video larger.
Iam aware of the way on how almost every file can be converted to .pdf within Ubuntu 10.04 using "Print to File" function. But is there a way to merge multiple files to create one .pdf? OR Is there a way to merge multiple .pdf files to create a single .pdf?
So I found PDftk which seems promising Im also looking at the commands which are also very powerful..but I think its kinda of laborious to type all my 50+ pdf files in the command prompt I have the front end of pdftk I was wondering is there a program (I have Pdf sam and Pdf Shuffler) that will allow me to import unlim. number of files and then just jam it into one big PDF file?
Is there any bash script to merge pdf files in a directory and sub-directory and rename it as the directory/sub-directory name?Like for example using GhostScript/PDFTK/PyPDF etc?I'm kinda new where it comes to bash scripting.I found this script on a blog that seems to do what I want, however, the bookmark functionality is not of importance to me (and requires jPDFBookmark - which I can't manage to install)
one is : /home/pt/t/pa1.flv the other is : /home/pt/t/pa2.flv 1 o merge with ffmpeg ffmpeg -i /home/pt/t/pa1.flv -i /home/pt/t/pa2.flv -vcodec copy -acodec copy /home/pt/t/dd.flv the problem is: the merged file ( /home/pt/t/dd.flv ) just contain one file--the first one /home/pt/t/pa1.flv,there is no the second file--/home/pt/t/pa2.flv in the /home/pt/t/dd.flv
I have a movie split into 3 iso image files, say, movie-1.iso,movie-2.iso, and movie-3.iso I did the following:
[ewn]# cd /mnt [mnt]# mkdir disk1 disk2 disk3 [mnt]# mount -t iso9660 -o ro,loop=/dev/loop0 /media/Hitachi_SATA_2TB/iso_files/Movies/movie-1.iso /mnt/disk1 [mnt]# mount -t iso9660 -o ro,loop=/dev/loop1 /media/Hitachi_SATA_2TB/iso_files/Movies/movie-2.iso /mnt/disk2
[Code]....
the files for disk2, disk3 are exactly the same except disk2 has 2 .vob files instead of 3. Can I make this work by changing the names of some of these files before merging them into one directory and then running the mkisofs command to create a new single iso image? If so, what names do I give so that the movie plays correctly? If not, just how do you do this?
Searching Google on how to join/merge many mp3 files, it suggests that I should just cat them together.That might "work", but clearly it is not the correct way to do it, as each header and set of IDv3 tags will also be concatenated.Does a Linux program exist that can be scripted to join/merge many mp3?Can mplayer/mencoder/ffmpeg do it?
this is not the right place to ask this question, but I found no other.I have an AAC audio file and a video file. Is there any way to merge them? I tried Avidemux but it won't let me open my AAC file.
I want to merge columns (selectively) from several files and create a new file with the merge output. I saw some suggestions to use pr/paste to join the columns and then awk to pick-up the columns.
Code: pr -m -t -s file1 file2 | gawk '{print $4,$5,$6,$1}' But I have hundreds of files and I cannot manually pick up columns using awk as given in
1. Is there an easy way to combine pdf files not only one "after" the other, but also one "next to" the other? For example, If I have one-page files called a1.pdf, a2.pdf, a3.pdf, a4.pdf, b1.pdf, b2.pdf, b3.pdf, b4.pdf, c1.pdf, c2.pdf, c3.pdf, c4.pdf, I want to combined them so that I can scroll down from a to c and scroll right from 1 to 4. That is, I want to merge them in "matrix form". If I zoom out the final file should look like:
I have a folder with hundreds of .txt files (logs of some java application) that I have to merge in to one single .txt file. This application produces a new log file everyday:
day1: logFriday10September2010.txt day2: logSaturday11September2010.txt ... day8: logFriday17September2010.txt ... and so on...
I could merge the files easily with "cat" and ">>" however, the problem is that I have to do it by taking into account the date (creation or modification) of the file.
If I simple use the cat command the output file will receive for example, all Fridays in a row, then all Saturdays, etc. and in that way I'm not considering the date.
I've searched for the options of the find command, since the files after creation are not modified...I try to use this for example:
$ find . -newer <some old file>
but that lists me all files after that <old file> and not by correct date.
On Windows I've been using XMPlayer for that purpose. XMPlayer has got a rar plugin and it works as expected.I stumbled across this plugin for Audacious but I'm not sure it's relatedhttp://kittylambda.com/rsn_plugin_for_audaciousI've ran XMPlay succesfully with wine with the rar plugin and it actually works (a bit slower but it works). But what I'm missing is integration with nautilus since drag and drop won't work from nautilus to XMPlayer. I have to navigate to the rar file manually on the file-open window and since Nautilus puts it's mounts on /home/[username]/.gvfsit's a bit cumbersome.
I'm a bit new to Python programming and hoped that someone might be able to help with a problem I'm having. What I essentially want to do is to combine two text files line for line. I know how to do this in a bash script so to give you a better idea here's the code for that:
Code:
This is basically for adding on values to the end of a CSV file that uses ';' as the delimiter. So say file1 said:
And file2 said:
Then running this command would create merged_file1_and_file2 which would be:
The code I'm using at the moment is:
Code:
As I'm sure any experienced python programmer will see, this prints out the first line of the file "csvraw" and then all of the lines of "stamps" and then the remainder of "csvraw".
What I'd like to do is something like: (pseudo code, I know it's not python ;-))
Code:
Is this possible? I've tried googling and my Python Pocket Reference hasn't been much help. I've looked at pickling but that doesn't seem appropriate.
I have an audiobook in 64 small mp3 files and I need them combined into a single file of any format in the proper order or order that I add them in. What program can I use?
I'm trying to zip or rar >100000 files into a single file so that I can upload it to my server much faster than ftp downloaded it. Total they're all only 4gb, but because of the number of files Nautilus freezes just opening the folder they're in. They're all .jpgs and all in the same folder and I've tried a few commands but I keep getting error messages.
Anyone have a command that will archive all the files from a folder into a single zip (or rar, tar etc)? I can't just archive the folder because then I would have to move all the files out of that folder and just opening the folder to move them would crash it, and I don't have ssh into that server.
I've been searching high and low for a solution to my problem, and have not had much luck as to yet!The situation is: I have two files containing bits of info that both need to be included in a single command, such as a for loop, but as separate elements. What I need to do is basically this:Code:ssh <servers in list a> ls -la | grep <items in list b>Does anyone have any thoughts on how I might do this? Is it possible to do using bash scripting alone?
During the past eight years I've used a number of computers with different operating systems and browsers. On each one I made a habit of using the bookmark utility of each browser and saving the bookmarks file. I never ensured the continuity of the bookmark file - with each new computer I started a new bookmark file. Even when I was reinstalling the operating system I didn't import the old bookmark file in the newly installed browser: I've always started a new bookmark file. As a result I have tens of bookmark files for Firefox (json format - some kind of xml?) and IE (html file format?) each one containing hundreds or thousands of saved links. I have also some files containing links in text format (created usually when I was using someone else computer).
I would like to be able to manage this bookmarks files by using some sort of "bookmark manager" software. The "bookmark manager" should be able to merge the bookmark files into a single collection/file. It should be able to identify and remove the duplicate entries (I have timely versions of the same bookmark file) and also it should be able to group the entries/links on categories (for example the bookmarked articles on codeproject.com should be grouped under the codeproject category). Not to mention that it should provide a search facility to quickly locate the interesting bookmarks. I couldn't find such software in ubuntu software center. Do you know something that even comes close to what I need?
I have very expensive data on my laptop and many user using my laptop so i want to lock my single drive that other user not access my files and my single drive. please tell me right answer ASAP
why the file manager, nautilus is it called? can't cope with folders with extremely large numbers of files in it, is there a fix? if not could be a future project for future distributions, i have some folders with 20, 000+ files in it, for rendering fractal animations, i am trying to free up some room, the trash can can't empty it from trash because there are so many files, and when i try to open the folder, it crashes and restarts completely