lk/system/awk.md
2020-01-02 01:04:35 +01:00

1.3 KiB

Basics

See a file's contents:

Return full contents of a string:

awk '{ print }' file

Print the first and second column:

awk '{print$1$2}'

Return every line with the word 'the' (like grep):

awk '/the/{print}' file

Print everything containing a lowercase letter:

awk '/[a-z]/{print}' file

Same with numbers [0-9], or using a caret we can show lines starting with a number - ^[0-9], or ending with an uppercase letter - $[A-Z].

Conditionals

awk '{ if($1 ~ /123/) print }' file

Check if the first column is equal to 1 or 2 or 3, and if so then print that line.

Grep for 'hawk' in a story:

awk '/hawk/' story.txt

Return any line with one or more "&" sequences:

awk '/&+/' script.sh

The pipe is used for 'or', so 'Orcs or drums' would be:

awk '/Orcs|Drums/' story.txt

Basic variables are:

  • FS = Input field separator

  • OFS = Output field separator

  • NF = Number of fields on the current line

  • NR = Number of records in the current file

  • RS = Record separator

  • ORS = Output record separator

  • FILENAME = the file you're looking at.

So you can count the number of lines in a file, by referencing the number of 'end line' statements:

awk 'END{print NR}' story.txt

Print line 2 from story.txt

awk '{if(NR~/^2$/)print}' story.txt

Same, but any line starting with "2":

awk '{if(NR~/^2/)print}' story.txt