Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: nawk
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting nawk Post 56252 by Perderabo on Wednesday 29th of September 2004 01:44:51 PM
Old 09-29-2004
I don't see any input being redirected into it from a pipe or shell. So it will read from stdin. If that's a file, it should be alright. If not it will read from the tty.

But this has nothing to do with :
run6[101]: syntax error at line 121 : `(' unexpected
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

nawk use

I found a command who prints x lines before and after a line who contain a searched string in a text file. The command is : ------------------- nawk 'c-->0;$0~s{if(b)for(c=b+1;c>1;c--)print r;print;c=a}b{r=$0}' b=2 a=4 s="string" file1 ...where "b" and "a" are the number of lines to print... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ctap
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to access values of awk/nawk variables outside the awk/nawk block?

i'm new to shell scripting and have a problem please help me in the script i have a nawk block which has a variable count nawk{ . . . count=count+1 print count } now i want to access the value of the count variable outside the awk block,like.. s=`expr count / m` (m is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: saniya
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

nawk help

What am I doing wrong here? I get syntax error. I am trying to parse a file looking for the lines with "running" as the first field then print the 5th field, then looking at the 9th field for specific values and writing the whole line to a junk file. nawk '; {if ($1 == "running")... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: beppler
10 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

nawk help

Hi Gurus, I am using a script as under : read string nawk -v search="$string" ' /a/,/z/ { block = (block ? block ORS : "") $0; } /z/ { if (block ~ search) print block; } ' <File> nawk -v search="$string" ' /b/,/z/ { ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vanand420
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Nesting - two nawk into one nawk

hi people; this is my two awk code: nawk '/cell+-/{r=(NF==8) ? $4FS$5FS$6 : NF==7 ? $4FS$5 : $4 ;c=split(r,rr);for (i=1;i<=c;i++){if(rr != "111111"){printf($3" %d ""\n",(i+3))}}printf("")}' /home/gc_sw/str.txt > /home/gc_sw/predwn.txt nawk -F'*' '{gsub(/ *$/,"")}$0=$1$($NF-2)'... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gc_sw
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Nawk help!!!

Hi, Please help me I want to filter all messages having a value less than a particular value..Please advice how to use <= in the below red marked script.. Getting the error as no such file or directory for the marked line no. Thanks in advance... Script is as under : read message gawk... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vanand420
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

using nawk

help out with code. two files aaa bbb contains some records..output file xyz should be like this..see below i/p file:aaa 08350|60521|0000|505|0000|1555|000|NYCMT|Pd_1 |-11878 i/p file: bbb 60521|60510 o/p file :xyz 60510|08350|60521|0000|505|0000|1555|000|NYCMT|Pd_1 |-11878 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Diddy
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

help with nawk

hi guys, I am writing a code and have stuck at one point. Inside nawk I am storing my desired variable a, I just need to find if a is present in an external file error.log or not. If yes, print something. grep or for loop not working properly inside nawk. Sample code provided. nawk ' BEGIN... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: shekhar2010us
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Nawk help

I don't know whats wrong with the code here. Its giving double counts. nawk -F# ' { if( match($2, "= ") > 0) num=substr($2,RSTART+2,length($2)-1); if (match($20, "= ") > 0) res=substr($20,RSTART+2,length($20)-1); if(match(num,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jagpreetc
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Nawk Problem - nawk out of space in tostring on

Hi.. i am running nawk scripts on solaris system to get records of file1 not in file2 and find duplicate records in a while with the following scripts -compare nawk 'NR==FNR{a++;next;} !a {print"line"FNR $0}' file1 file2duplicate - nawk '{a++}END{for(i in a){if(a-1)print i,a}}' file1in the middle... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: Abhiraj Singh
12 Replies
WHICH(1)						      General Commands Manual							  WHICH(1)

NAME
which - shows the full path of (shell) commands. SYNOPSIS
which [options] [--] programname [...] DESCRIPTION
Which takes one or more arguments. For each of its arguments it prints to stdout the full path of the executables that would have been exe- cuted when this argument had been entered at the shell prompt. It does this by searching for an executable or script in the directories listed in the environment variable PATH using the same algorithm as bash(1). This man page is generated from the file which.texinfo. OPTIONS
--all, -a Print all matching executables in PATH, not just the first. --read-alias, -i Read aliases from stdin, reporting matching ones on stdout. This is useful in combination with using an alias for which itself. For example alias which='alias | which -i'. --skip-alias Ignore option `--read-alias', if any. This is useful to explicity search for normal binaries, while using the `--read-alias' option in an alias or function for which. --read-functions Read shell function definitions from stdin, reporting matching ones on stdout. This is useful in combination with using a shell func- tion for which itself. For example: which() { declare -f | which --read-functions $@ } export -f which --skip-functions Ignore option `--read-functions', if any. This is useful to explicity search for normal binaries, while using the `--read-functions' option in an alias or function for which. --skip-dot Skip directories in PATH that start with a dot. --skip-tilde Skip directories in PATH that start with a tilde and executables which reside in the HOME directory. --show-dot If a directory in PATH starts with a dot and a matching executable was found for that path, then print "./programname" rather than the full path. --show-tilde Output a tilde when a directory matches the HOME directory. This option is ignored when which is invoked as root. --tty-only Stop processing options on the right if not on tty. --version,-v,-V Print version information on standard output then exit successfully. --help Print usage information on standard output then exit successfully. RETURN VALUE
Which returns the number of failed arguments, or -1 when no `programname' was given. EXAMPLE
The recommended way to use this utility is by adding an alias (C shell) or shell function (Bourne shell) for which like the following: [ba]sh: which () { (alias; declare -f) | /usr/bin/which --tty-only --read-alias --read-functions --show-tilde --show-dot $@ } export -f which [t]csh: alias which 'alias | /usr/bin/which --tty-only --read-alias --show-dot --show-tilde' This will print the readable ~/ and ./ when starting which from your prompt, while still printing the full path when used from a script: > which q2 ~/bin/q2 > echo `which q2` /home/carlo/bin/q2 BUGS
The HOME directory is determined by looking for the HOME environment variable, which aborts when this variable doesn't exist. Which will consider two equivalent directories to be different when one of them contains a path with a symbolic link. AUTHOR
Carlo Wood <carlo@gnu.org> SEE ALSO
bash(1) WHICH(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:19 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy