Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers awk division without rounding Post 303046079 by charlesep on Thursday 23rd of April 2020 09:08:06 AM
Old 04-23-2020
Thanks, that's what I was looking for, but how do I put the value into a variable instead of printing it with printf?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Annoying rounding issue in awk

Hello I am getting this very annoying issue in awk: awk '{a=12825;b=a*1.25; print b}' test 16031.2 Thing is the multiplication result is wrong... Result should be 16031.25. I think the issue only happens on bigger numbers. What can I do to get passed this? Thanks by advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Indalecio
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Rounding issue with awk

Hi Friends, I am trying to round following number. 0.07435000 echo "0.07435000"|awk '{printf "%s\n",$1*100}'|awk '{printf "%.2f\n",$1}' It returns: 7.435 It should return: 7.44 Any suggestion please? Thanks, Prashant (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ppat7046
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk Division and modulus

I need to read the file divide 3 column with 2nd and run a modulus of 10 and check whether the remainder is zero or not if not print the entire line. cat filename | awk '{ if ($3 / $2 % 10 != 0) print $0}' Whats wrong with it ? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dinjo_jo
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK rounding up numbers

Hi, I have managed to round up numbers by using the following command: echo "5.54" | awk '{printf "%.0f\n", $1}' result 6 How can I round up all the numbers in a column in a file and print the lines with the new calculated totals? Thanks, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: keenboy100
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

awk: division by zero

I received error "awk: division by zero" while executing the following statement. SunOS 5.10 Generic_142900-15 sun4us sparc FJSV,GPUZC-M echo 8 | awk 'END {printf ("%d\n",NR/$1 + 0.5);}' file1.lst awk: division by zero Can someone provide solution? Thanks Please use code... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumar77
11 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk, floating point and rounding

I had a person bring an interesting problem to me that appears to involve some sort of rounding inside awk. I've verified this with awk and nawk on Solaris as well as with gawk 3.1.5 on a Linux box. The original code fragment he brought me was thus: for (index=0; index < 1; index=index+.1) ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mmyer2
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk & division

vmstat|awk '{print $3}'|tail -1 returns 6250511, but what I need is 24416, which is 6250511 divided by 256. Please advise. Thank you so much (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Daniel Gate
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk calculation automatically rounding off the output

I have some calculation in my script which is similar to the below example . I find that sometimes when using large decimal digits, the output gets automatically rounded off and it is affecting the program. I am not able to understand what is happening here.. awk '{ a=6.32498922 a1=6.324... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: wanderingmind16
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk - Division with condition

Hi Friends, I have an input file like this cat input chr1 100 200 1 2 chr1 120 130 na 1 chr1 140 160 1 na chr1 170 180 na na chr1 190 220 0 0 chr1 220 230 nd 1 chr2 330 400 1 nd chr2 410 450 nd nd chr3 500 700 1 1 I want to calculate the division of 4th and 5th columns. But, if... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

[awk] rounding a float number?

Heyas Trying to calculate the total size of a file by reading its bitrate. Code snippet: fs_expected() { # # Returns the expected filesize in bytes # pr_str() { ff=$(cat $TMP.info) d="${ff#*bitrate: }" echo "${d%%,*}" | $AWK '{print $1}' | head -n 1 } t_BYTERATE=$((... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: sea
9 Replies
STDIO(3S)																 STDIO(3S)

NAME
stdio - standard buffered input/output package SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> FILE *stdin; FILE *stdout; FILE *stderr; DESCRIPTION
The functions described in section 3S constitute a user-level buffering scheme. The in-line macros getc and putc(3S) handle characters quickly. The higher level routines gets, fgets, scanf, fscanf, fread, puts, fputs, printf, fprintf, fwrite all use getc and putc; they can be freely intermixed. A file with associated buffering is called a stream, and is declared to be a pointer to a defined type FILE. Fopen(3S) creates certain descriptive data for a stream and returns a pointer to designate the stream in all further transactions. There are three normally open streams with constant pointers declared in the include file and associated with the standard open files: stdin standard input file stdout standard output file stderr standard error file A constant `pointer' NULL(0) designates no stream at all. An integer constant EOF (-1) is returned upon end of file or error by integer functions that deal with streams. Any routine that uses the standard input/output package must include the header file <stdio.h> of pertinent macro definitions. The func- tions and constants mentioned in sections labeled 3S are declared in the include file and need no further declaration. The constants, and the following `functions' are implemented as macros; redeclaration of these names is perilous: getc, getchar, putc, putchar, feof, ferror, fileno. SEE ALSO
open(2), close(2), read(2), write(2), fread(3S), fseek(3S), f*(3S) DIAGNOSTICS
The value EOF is returned uniformly to indicate that a FILE pointer has not been initialized with fopen, input (output) has been attempted on an output (input) stream, or a FILE pointer designates corrupt or otherwise unintelligible FILE data. For purposes of efficiency, this implementation of the standard library has been changed to line buffer output to a terminal by default and attempts to do this transparently by flushing the output whenever a read(2) from the standard input is necessary. This is almost always transparent, but may cause confusion or malfunctioning of programs which use standard i/o routines but use read(2) themselves to read from the standard input. In cases where a large amount of computation is done after printing part of a line on an output terminal, it is necessary to fflush(3S) the standard output before going off and computing so that the output will appear. BUGS
The standard buffered functions do not interact well with certain other library and system functions, especially vfork and abort. LIST OF FUNCTIONS
Name Appears on Page Description clearerr ferror.3s stream status inquiries fclose fclose.3s close or flush a stream fdopen fopen.3s open a stream feof ferror.3s stream status inquiries ferror ferror.3s stream status inquiries fflush fclose.3s close or flush a stream fgetc getc.3s get character or word from stream fgets gets.3s get a string from a stream fileno ferror.3s stream status inquiries fopen fopen.3s open a stream fprintf printf.3s formatted output conversion fputc putc.3s put character or word on a stream fputs puts.3s put a string on a stream fread fread.3s buffered binary input/output freopen fopen.3s open a stream fscanf scanf.3s formatted input conversion fseek fseek.3s reposition a stream ftell fseek.3s reposition a stream fwrite fread.3s buffered binary input/output getc getc.3s get character or word from stream getchar getc.3s get character or word from stream gets gets.3s get a string from a stream getw getc.3s get character or word from stream printf printf.3s formatted output conversion putc putc.3s put character or word on a stream putchar putc.3s put character or word on a stream puts puts.3s put a string on a stream putw putc.3s put character or word on a stream rewind fseek.3s reposition a stream scanf scanf.3s formatted input conversion setbuf setbuf.3s assign buffering to a stream setbuffer setbuf.3s assign buffering to a stream setlinebuf setbuf.3s assign buffering to a stream sprintf printf.3s formatted output conversion sscanf scanf.3s formatted input conversion ungetc ungetc.3s push character back into input stream 4th Berkeley Distribution May 13, 1986 STDIO(3S)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:26 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy