I want to exclude lines containing a specific string.
header
1:test
2:test
3:none
4:test
Why don't these commands work?
awk -F: 'FNR>1 {$0 !~ /none/} {print $1}' 1.txt
awk -F: 'FNR>1 {$2 !~ /none/} {print $1}' 1.txt
but this works:
awk '$0 !~ /none/ {print $0}' 1.txt
I intend to get
1
2
4
You need to provide the regex test as condition, not as action, and may use
awk -F: 'FNR>1 && !/none/{print $1}' file
awk -F: 'FNR>1 && $2 !~ /none/{print $1}' file
See an awk online demo
Details
-F: - sets the field separator to a colon
FNR>1 && !/none/ - if number of processed records for current file is more than 1 and there is no none on the line (if $2 !~ /none/ is used, returns true if Field 2 does not contain none pattern)
{print $1} - print Field 1 value.
This is a follow-up to my question to understand more about the OFS in AWK.
My understanding is, set it once in the beginning and it will be used in "print" to separate the fields. However, it didn't work as expected, as explained in my original question.
My File: someone.txt
LN_A,FN_A<aa#xyz.com>;
LN_B,FN_B<bb#xyz.com>;
Expected output:
FN_A,LN_A,aa
FN_B,LN_B,bb
I have tried the following:
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' '{print $2 $1 $3}' someone.txt
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' 'NF=3 {print $2 $1 $3}' someone.txt
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' 'NF=3; {print $2 $1 $3}' someone.txt
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1} {print $2 $1 $3}' someone.txt
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1} {print $0}' someone.txt
Finally, I managed to get the required output with the following:
awk -F'[,<#]' '{print $2 "," $1 "," $3}' someone.txt
Consider these cases:
a) $ echo '1 2 3' | awk '{print}'
1 2 3
b) $ echo '1 2 3' | awk '{print $1, $2, $3}'
1 2 3
c) $ echo '1 2 3' | awk -v OFS=',' '{print}'
1 2 3
d) $ echo '1 2 3' | awk -v OFS=',' '{print $1, $2, $3}'
1,2,3
e) $ echo '1 2 3' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; print}'
1,2,3
The above show OFS being used in "b" and "d" (when individual fields are being printed in a comma-separated list) and in "e" (when the record $0 is being reconstructed as a result of a value being assigned to a field before the record is printed).
Those are the only 2 times when OFS is used implicitly - when printing a comma-separated list of values and when reconstructing the record.
When you print the record (e.g. by print or print $0) as in "a" and "c" above or print any other string you are not using OFS. OFS may have been used earlier to reconstruct the record as in "e" above but the act of printing anything that's not a comma-separated list is not using OFS, it's just printing any old string which just happens to be $0 in this case.
Note:
Explicitly changing a field reconstructs $0 from the existing fields using OFS between the fields, it does not resplit $0 into fields again so FS is not used in this process. So $1=$1 or sub(/1/,2,$1) uses OFS but not FS.
Explicitly changing $0 (i.e. not implicitly as a result of 1 above) resplits $0 into fields using FS as the separator, it does not use OFS in any way. So $0=$0 or sub(/1/,2) uses FS but not OFS.
Understanding how FS and OFS work together and how they effect assignments to fields and $0 is very important. If you can explain this behavior then you've got it:
f) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
2,a b,a,b
g) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
2,a,b,a,b
h) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; $0=$0; print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
1,a,b,a,b,
i) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; $0=$0; FS=OFS; print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
1,a,b,a,b,
j) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; $0=$0; FS=OFS; $1=$1; print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
1,a,b,a,b,
k) $ echo 'a b' | awk -v OFS=',' '{$1=$1; $0=$0; FS=OFS; $1=$1; $0=$0; print NF, $0, $1, $2}'
2,a,b,a,b
If not then feel free to ask questions.
It is simple, you have set the OFS="," in beginning of your awk statement but you are simply printing the fields(NOTE: without editing the line OR without mentioning field separator(using comma etc)) in that case OFS will not come in picture that is why your output is NOT having anything like separator.
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' '{print $2,$1,$3}' Input_fie
If you use above command where I have mentioned , between printing fields you will see you are getting OFS now and this is how it works.
Or in case you want to see use of OFS you could use this(though above solution is BEST one but for your understanding I am adding this one too).
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' '{$0=$2 OFS $1 OFS $3} 1' Input_file
Example to understand OFS by printing whole line(s): Let us understand it more clearly by printing whole line with OFS and withoutOFS` effect.
Let us run this code:
awk -F'[,<#]' -v OFS=',' 'FNR==1{$1=$1} 1' Input_file
What it does is when line number 1 is there then I am resetting $1's value as mentioned above to let OFS come into picture so that new value of OFS comes(off course wherever field separator was picked it will place OFS value there). So it will only be done for first line and REST of the lines nothing should happen. Let us see what output comes now?
LN_A,FN_A,aa,xyz.com>;
LN_B,FN_B<bb#xyz.com>;
You see the difference? See first line is having , in output and 2nd line is printing as it is, why because in only 1st line we have edited the first field so OFS came into picture.
As I just found an unused copy of Aho, Kernighan, Weinberger: The AWK Programming language from 1988, I(t)'ll take you to the source (pages 35-36):
"Field Variables. The fields of the current input line are called $1, $2,
through $NF; $0 refers to the whole line. Fields share the properties of other
variables — they may be used in arithmetic or string operations, and may be
assigned to. - -
One can assign a new string to a field:
BEGIN { FS = OFS = "\t" }
$4 == "North America" { $4 = "NA" }
$4 == "South America" { $4 = "SA" }
{ print }
In this program, the BEGIN action sets FS, the variable that controls the input
field separator, and OFS, the output field separator, both to a tab. The print
statement in the fourth line prints the value of $0 after it has been modified by
previous assignments. This is important: when $0 is changed by assignment or
substitution, $1, $2, etc., and NF will be recomputed; likewise, when one of $1, $2, etc., is changed, $0 is reconstructed using OFS to separate fields."
I am trying to format a tab-delimited file using awk and the command runs but no output results. The output is also tab-delimited. The format of the output is $1 $2 $2 $3 REF=$4;OBS=$5 $6. Maybe the awk is not the best approach as it seems like it should work. Thank you :).
file (~370 lines all in the below format)
chr4 70501545 rs28560191 C A UGT2A1;UGT2A2
desired output
chr4 70501545 70501545 rs28560191 REF=C;OBS=A UGT2A1;UGT2A2
awk
awk -F'\t' -v OFS='\t' '{print $1,$2,$2,$3,"REF="$4";""OBS="$5,$6}' file
You are forgetting the print statement.
awk '{ print $1 "\t" $2 "\t" $2 "\t" $3 "\t" "REF="$4";""OBS="$5 "\t" $6}' file
I want to use awk to split fields on a double pipeline ||. Here is my code:
Here is the code that I'm using.
BEGIN {
FS="/|/|"
}
{
print $2
print $1
}
You need to use backslashes, not forward slashes to escape the pipe characters. They also need to be double-escaped:
$ awk 'BEGIN{FS="\\|\\|"}{print $2; print $1}' <<< "a||b"
b
a
The reason that they need to be double-escaped is that they are effectively parsed twice. The first backslashes are lost in the conversion from a string to a regex pattern and the second ones are needed so that the | is not interpreted as a regex OR.
Some other variations:
awk -F"\\\|\\\|" '{print $2; print $1}' <<< "a||b"
b
a
awk -F'\\|\\|' '{print $2; print $1}' <<< "a||b"
b
a
awk -F"[|][|]" '{print $2; print $1}' <<< "a||b"
b
a
awk -F'[|][|]' '{print $2; print $1}' <<< "a||b"
b
a
How do I select the first column from the TAB separated string?
# echo "LOAD_SETTLED LOAD_INIT 2011-01-13 03:50:01" | awk -F'\t' '{print $1}'
The above will return the entire line and not just "LOAD_SETTLED" as expected.
Update:
I need to change the third column in the tab separated values.
The following does not work.
echo $line | awk 'BEGIN { -v var="$mycol_new" FS = "[ \t]+" } ; { print $1 $2 var $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 }' >> /pdump/temp.txt
This however works as expected if the separator is comma instead of tab.
echo $line | awk -v var="$mycol_new" -F'\t' '{print $1 "," $2 "," var "," $4 "," $5 "," $6 "," $7 "," $8 "," $9 "}' >> /pdump/temp.txt
You need to set the OFS variable (output field separator) to be a tab:
echo "$line" |
awk -v var="$mycol_new" -F'\t' 'BEGIN {OFS = FS} {$3 = var; print}'
(make sure you quote the $line variable in the echo statement)
Make sure they're really tabs! In bash, you can insert a tab using C-v TAB
$ echo "LOAD_SETTLED LOAD_INIT 2011-01-13 03:50:01" | awk -F$'\t' '{print $1}'
LOAD_SETTLED
Use:
awk -v FS='\t' -v OFS='\t' ...
Example from one of my scripts.
I use the FS and OFS variables to manipulate BIND zone files, which are tab delimited:
awk -v FS='\t' -v OFS='\t' \
-v record_type=$record_type \
-v hostname=$hostname \
-v ip_address=$ip_address '
$1==hostname && $3==record_type {$4=ip_address}
{print}
' $zone_file > $temp
This is a clean and easy to read way to do this.
You can set the Field Separator:
... | awk 'BEGIN {FS="\t"}; {print $1}'
Excellent read:
https://docs.freebsd.org/info/gawk/gawk.info.Field_Separators.html
echo "LOAD_SETTLED LOAD_INIT 2011-01-13 03:50:01" | awk -v var="test" 'BEGIN { FS = "[ \t]+" } ; { print $1 "\t" var "\t" $3 }'
If your fields are separated by tabs - this works for me in Linux.
awk -F'\t' '{print $1}' < tab_delimited_file.txt
I use this to process data generated by mysql, which generates tab-separated output in batch mode.
From awk man page:
-F fs
--field-separator fs
Use fs for the input field separator (the value of the FS prede‐
fined variable).
1st column only
— awk NF=1 FS='\t'
LOAD_SETTLED
First 3 columns
— awk NF=3 FS='\t' OFS='\t'
LOAD_SETTLED LOAD_INIT 2011-01-13
Except first 2 columns
— {g,n}awk NF=NF OFS= FS='^([^\t]+\t){2}'
— {m}awk NF=NF OFS= FS='^[^\t]+\t[^\t]+\t'
2011-01-13 03:50:01
Last column only
— awk '($!NF=$NF)^_' FS='\t', or
— awk NF=NF OFS= FS='^.*\t'
03:50:01
Should this not work?
echo "LOAD_SETTLED LOAD_INIT 2011-01-13 03:50:01" | awk '{print $1}'