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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Searching for a token in a file Post 302877584 by RudiC on Monday 2nd of December 2013 11:37:31 AM
Old 12-02-2013
Never change horses. If you use awk, try to do as much as possible in it (like Yoda's approach). If you start with shell scripting, try to stick to it. It is possible in shell, assuming filearray ist assigned from token.txt:
Code:
while read TOKEN REST
  do for ((i=0; i<${#filearray[@]}; i++))   
     do     [ "$REST" != "${REST/${filearray[$i]}/}" ] && echo ${filearray[$i]} $TOKEN
     done
 done <flat.txt
abc 123
der 234
xyz 345

And, don't open and read flat.txt several times. Memory access is far faster, so loop the array several times.
 

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WCSTOK(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 WCSTOK(3)

NAME
wcstok - split wide-character string into tokens SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h> wchar_t *wcstok(wchar_t *wcs, const wchar_t *delim, wchar_t **ptr); DESCRIPTION
The wcstok() function is the wide-character equivalent of the strtok(3) function, with an added argument to make it multithread-safe. It can be used to split a wide-character string wcs into tokens, where a token is defined as a substring not containing any wide-characters from delim. The search starts at wcs, if wcs is not NULL, or at *ptr, if wcs is NULL. First, any delimiter wide-characters are skipped, that is, the pointer is advanced beyond any wide-characters which occur in delim. If the end of the wide-character string is now reached, wcstok() returns NULL, to indicate that no tokens were found, and stores an appropriate value in *ptr, so that subsequent calls to wcstok() will continue to return NULL. Otherwise, the wcstok() function recognizes the beginning of a token and returns a pointer to it, but before doing that, it zero-terminates the token by replacing the next wide-character which occurs in delim with a L'' character, and it updates *ptr so that subsequent calls will continue searching after the end of recognized token. RETURN VALUE
The wcstok() function returns a pointer to the next token, or NULL if no further token was found. CONFORMING TO
C99. NOTES
The original wcs wide-character string is destructively modified during the operation. EXAMPLE
The following code loops over the tokens contained in a wide-character string. wchar_t *wcs = ...; wchar_t *token; wchar_t *state; for (token = wcstok(wcs, " ", &state); token != NULL; token = wcstok(NULL, " ", &state)) { ... } SEE ALSO
strtok(3), wcschr(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
1999-07-25 WCSTOK(3)
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