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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Strange behaviour of arrays in awk Post 302852447 by Scrutinizer on Wednesday 11th of September 2013 02:33:30 PM
Old 09-11-2013
That is standard awk behaviour, arrays are not declared. If you refer to a non-existing array element, it automatically creates it. It does not assign an empty value, but rather it creates an unitialized array element with an empty value.. To test the presence of an array element without creating it, you need the index in array expression.

As for the second part. No, not exactly because of the first condition, which makes that the second part gets executed for some of the lines in file1. Try:

Code:
FNR==NR { 
  if (/file1_l1/) code[$2] = 1
  next
}


Last edited by Scrutinizer; 09-11-2013 at 04:22 PM..
 

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ppmtosixel(1)						      General Commands Manual						     ppmtosixel(1)

NAME
ppmtosixel - convert a portable pixmap into DEC sixel format SYNOPSIS
ppmtosixel [-raw] [-margin] [ppmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Produces sixel commands (SIX) as output. The output is formatted for color printing, e.g. for a DEC LJ250 color inkjet printer. If RGB values from the PPM file do not have maxval=100, the RGB values are rescaled. A printer control header and a color assignment table begin the SIX file. Image data is written in a compressed format by default. A printer control footer ends the image file. OPTIONS
-raw If specified, each pixel will be explicitly described in the image file. If -raw is not specified, output will default to com- pressed format in which identical adjacent pixels are replaced by "repeat pixel" commands. A raw file is often an order of magni- tude larger than a compressed file and prints much slower. -margin If -margin is not specified, the image will be start at the left margin (of the window, paper, or whatever). If -margin is speci- fied, a 1.5 inch left margin will offset the image. PRINTING
Generally, sixel files must reach the printer unfiltered. Use the lpr -x option or cat filename > /dev/tty0?. BUGS
Upon rescaling, truncation of the least significant bits of RGB values may result in poor color conversion. If the original PPM maxval was greater than 100, rescaling also reduces the image depth. While the actual RGB values from the ppm file are more or less retained, the color palette of the LJ250 may not match the colors on your screen. This seems to be a printer limitation. SEE ALSO
ppm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1991 by Rick Vinci. 26 April 1991 ppmtosixel(1)
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