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Full Discussion: Search for exact string
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Search for exact string Post 302377753 by cfajohnson on Saturday 5th of December 2009 03:30:08 AM
Old 12-05-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by gaurav1086
hello
I believe you.. but I just wanted to know that you are putting grep higher on the priority list than awk based on experience working with grep and awk or with reference to their source codes.
Regards.

grep is optimized for searching; awk is not.

In a small file, the overhead of a second process may outweigh that efficiency; in a large file, the difference will be noticeable.
 

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TEST(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   TEST(1)

NAME
test, [ - test for a condition SYNOPSIS
test expr [ expr ] OPTIONS
(none) EXAMPLES
test -r file # See if file is readable DESCRIPTION
Test checks to see if files exist, are readable, etc. and returns an exit status of zero if true and nonzero if false. The legal operators are -r file true if the file is readable -w file true if the file is writable -x file true if the file is executable -f file true if the file is not a directory -d file true if the file is a directory -s file true if the file exists and has a size > 0 -t fd true if file descriptor fd (default 1) is a terminal -z s true if the string s has zero length -n s true if the string s has nonzero length s1 = s2 true if the strings s1 and s2 are identical s1 != s2 true if the strings s1 and s2 are different m -eq m true if the integers m and n are numerically equal The operators -gt, -ge, -ne, -le, and -lt may be used as well. These operands may be combined with -a (Boolean and), -o (Boolean or), ! (negation). The priority of -a is higher than that of -o. Parentheses are permitted, but must be escaped to keep the shell from trying to interpret them. SEE ALSO
expr(1), sh(1). TEST(1)
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