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Full Discussion: Why is cut slower than awk?
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Why is cut slower than awk? Post 302284246 by BandGap on Thursday 5th of February 2009 05:10:26 AM
Old 02-05-2009
Why is cut slower than awk?

Hi all,

for test reasons I tried the following two one-liners:

Code:
time awk '{print $4}' T_64xSC_128RW_K500.dat > /dev/null

and

Code:
time cut -d" " -f6 T_64xSC_128RW_K500.dat > /dev/null

The file contains approx. 250k lines. awk does it in 0.15 secs (real), cut in 0.44. The user time has about the same relation, whereas the sys time is almost identical in both cases.

The fact that awk is almost 8 times larger than cut (in kB) seems to make no difference.

Why is cut almost 4 times slower?

Cheers,
BG
 

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CUT(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						    CUT(1)

NAME
cut -- cut out selected portions of each line of a file SYNOPSIS
cut -b list [-n] [file ...] cut -c list [file ...] cut -f list [-w | -d delim] [-s] [file ...] DESCRIPTION
The cut utility cuts out selected portions of each line (as specified by list) from each file and writes them to the standard output. If no file arguments are specified, or a file argument is a single dash ('-'), cut reads from the standard input. The items specified by list can be in terms of column position or in terms of fields delimited by a special character. Column and field numbering start from 1. The list option argument is a comma or whitespace separated set of increasing numbers and/or number ranges. Number ranges consist of a num- ber, a dash ('-'), and a second number and select the columns or fields from the first number to the second, inclusive. Numbers or number ranges may be preceded by a dash, which selects all columns or fields from 1 to the last number. Numbers or number ranges may be followed by a dash, which selects all columns or fields from the last number to the end of the line. Numbers and number ranges may be repeated, overlap- ping, and in any order. It is not an error to select columns or fields not present in the input line. The options are as follows: -b list The list specifies byte positions. -c list The list specifies character positions. -d delim Use delim as the field delimiter character instead of the tab character. -f list The list specifies fields, separated in the input by the field delimiter character (see the -d option). Output fields are separated by a single occurrence of the field delimiter character. -n Do not split multi-byte characters. Characters will only be output if at least one byte is selected, and, after a prefix of zero or more unselected bytes, the rest of the bytes that form the character are selected. -s Suppress lines with no field delimiter characters. Unless specified, lines with no delimiters are passed through unmodified. -w Use whitespace (spaces and tabs) as the delimiter. Consecutive spaces and tabs count as one single field separator. ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of cut as described in environ(7). EXIT STATUS
The cut utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. EXAMPLES
Extract users' login names and shells from the system passwd(5) file as ``name:shell'' pairs: cut -d : -f 1,7 /etc/passwd Show the names and login times of the currently logged in users: who | cut -c 1-16,26-38 SEE ALSO
colrm(1), paste(1) STANDARDS
The cut utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2''). HISTORY
A cut command appeared in AT&T System III UNIX. BSD
August 8, 2012 BSD
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