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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Tip: alternative for NR==FNR in awk Post 302911611 by Don Cragun on Friday 1st of August 2014 04:32:13 PM
Old 08-01-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
Thanks Don,
... ... ...
BTW most awk versions want if (... ~ "="). While all accept (... ~ /=/) outside a {block}
Thanks for the warning.

The standards say that the right hand operand of the ~ and !~ operators can always be a string containing an ERE or an ERE token (i.e., /ERE/). But, if there is an ambiguity as to whether a / is a division operator or part of an ERE token, awk is supposed to assume it is a division operator. In a simple if statement like this, there shouldn't be any ambiguity.
 

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EXPR(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   EXPR(1)

NAME
expr - evaluate arguments as an expression SYNOPSIS
expr arg ... DESCRIPTION
The arguments are taken as an expression. After evaluation, the result is written on the standard output. Each token of the expression is a separate argument. The operators and keywords are listed below. The list is in order of increasing precedence, with equal precedence operators grouped. expr | expr yields the first expr if it is neither null nor `0', otherwise yields the second expr. expr & expr yields the first expr if neither expr is null or `0', otherwise yields `0'. expr relop expr where relop is one of < <= = != >= >, yields `1' if the indicated comparison is true, `0' if false. The comparison is numeric if both expr are integers, otherwise lexicographic. expr + expr expr - expr addition or subtraction of the arguments. expr * expr expr / expr expr % expr multiplication, division, or remainder of the arguments. expr : expr The matching operator compares the string first argument with the regular expression second argument; regular expression syntax is the same as that of ed(1). The (...) pattern symbols can be used to select a portion of the first argument. Otherwise, the matching operator yields the number of characters matched (`0' on failure). ( expr ) parentheses for grouping. Examples: To add 1 to the Shell variable a: a=`expr $a + 1` To find the filename part (least significant part) of the pathname stored in variable a, which may or may not contain `/': expr $a : '.*/(.*)' '|' $a Note the quoted Shell metacharacters. SEE ALSO
ed(1), sh(1), test(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Expr returns the following exit codes: 0 if the expression is neither null nor `0', 1 if the expression is null or `0', 2 for invalid expressions. EXPR(1)
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