Awk: Difference between revisions
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| $1, $2, $3 ... || Corresponding fields in the record, 1-based. | | $1, $2, $3 ... || Corresponding fields in the record, 1-based. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| $0 || The entire record | | $0 || The entire record. | ||
|- | |||
| FS || The [[#Field_Separator|field separator]]. | |||
|- | |||
| RS || The "record separator". By default is "newline". | |||
|- | |||
| NR || Keeps a current count of the number of input records. | |||
|- | |||
| NF || Keeps a count of the number of fields in an input record. The last field in the input record can be designated by $NF. | |||
|- | |||
| FILENAME || Contains the name of the current input file. | |||
|- | |||
| OFS || The "output field separator", which separates the fields when awk prints them. By default is "space". | |||
|- | |||
| ORS || The "output record separator", which separates the records when awk prints them. By default is "new line". | |||
|- | |||
| OFMT || Stores the format for numeric output. The default format is "%.6g". | |||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 23:11, 14 June 2018
External
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awk
- Awk by Example
Internal
Overview
awk handles a stream of text as a sequence of records. The default record separator is the new line, so by default each line is handled as a record. Each record is broken up into a sequence of fields. By default, the field separator is white space. An awk program consists in condition-action statements, that are applied to the records, as they are fed into awk. Each record is scanned for the condition, which can be a pattern, among other things, and for each condition that matches, the associated action is executed.
awk '<program>' <file-to-process>
The program is a succession of:
condition { action }
Example:
awk '{print $1}' ./sample.txt
For the above, the condition matches all records and the action prints out the first field. More details about the syntax are available in Program Structure.
The program can be specified in a separate text file, which is provided to awk by preceding the program file name with -f:
awk -f <program-file-name> <file-to-process>
Referring Fields
The fields are referred to with $<field-number> where field-number is 1-based: the first field in the record is $1.
Field Separator
The default field separator is white space. It can be changed either in command line or program by using the FS built-in variable.
Command line:
awk -F":" ....
In program:
awk 'BEGIN {FS=":"} {print $1}' ...
Program Structure
Comments
Everything that follows a '#' is a comment. The '#' does not have to be on the first position in line.
Built-in Variables
Except the field variables and the entire record variables $0, $1, ... that must be prefixed by '$', all other variables must not be prefixed by '$'.
$1, $2, $3 ... | Corresponding fields in the record, 1-based. |
$0 | The entire record. |
FS | The field separator. |
RS | The "record separator". By default is "newline". |
NR | Keeps a current count of the number of input records. |
NF | Keeps a count of the number of fields in an input record. The last field in the input record can be designated by $NF. |
FILENAME | Contains the name of the current input file. |
OFS | The "output field separator", which separates the fields when awk prints them. By default is "space". |
ORS | The "output record separator", which separates the records when awk prints them. By default is "new line". |
OFMT | Stores the format for numeric output. The default format is "%.6g". |
Conditions
condition { ... }
Actions
... { action }