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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare multiple files and print unique lines Post 302595532 by jacobs.smith on Friday 3rd of February 2012 11:08:48 AM
Old 02-03-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by radoulov
Code:
awk 'END {
  for (R in r) {
    split(r[R], t, SUBSEP)
    if (!t[1])
      print t[3], t[2]
    }
  }
{
  k = $1 SUBSEP $2 SUBSEP $3
  r[k] = c[k]++ SUBSEP FILENAME SUBSEP $0 
  }' [12].txt


It works great, but will it compare the first three columns?
 

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CAT(1)							      General Commands Manual							    CAT(1)

NAME
cat, read, nobs - catenate files SYNOPSIS
cat [ file ... ] read [ -m ] [ -n nline ] [ file ... ] nobs [ file ... ] DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and writes it on the standard output. Thus cat file prints a file and cat file1 file2 >file3 concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third. If no file is given, cat reads from the standard input. Output is buffered in blocks matching the input. Read copies to standard output exactly one line from the named file, default standard input. It is useful in interactive rc(1) scripts. The -m flag causes it to continue reading and writing multiple lines until end of file; -n causes it to read no more than nline lines. Read always executes a single write for each line of input, which can be helpful when preparing input to programs that expect line-at-a- time data. It never reads any more data from the input than it prints to the output. Nobs copies the named files to standard output except that it removes all backspace characters and the characters that precede them. It is useful to use as $PAGER with the Unix version of man(1) when run inside a win (see acme(1)) window. SOURCE
/src/cmd/cat.c /src/cmd/read.c /bin/nobs SEE ALSO
cp(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Read exits with status eof on end of file or, in the -n case, if it doesn't read nlines lines. BUGS
Beware of and which destroy input files before reading them. CAT(1)
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