2

I am using awk substr() to extract a sub string from the string.

For example if my string looks like this:

qwertyuiop

And I want to extract (1-3) & (6-9) characters I use this:

awk '{print (substr($1, 1, 3) substr($1, 6, 4))}'  
qweyui

How can I repeat a specific subtraction several times?

For example, I want to extract (1-3) & (6-9)(6-9)(6-9) characters to get the result like ths:

qweyuioyuioyuio

Of course I can use a command like this:

awk '{print (substr($1, 1, 3) substr($1, 6, 4) substr($1, 6, 4) substr($1, 6, 4))}'

Is there a simpler way?

1
  • 5
    assign the value of the substr to a variable, then repeat printing the variable? Good luck.
    – shellter
    Feb 11, 2013 at 18:34

4 Answers 4

3

Provided you want to extract non overlapping substrings, you can use the fixed column width option of gawk:

echo "qwertyuiop" | gawk -v FIELDWIDTHS="3 2 4" '{ print $1 $3 $3 $3 }'

You define 3 columns. The first one is 3 characters wide (this is the same as substr($1, 1, 3)). The second one is 2 characters wide (and we will ignore it). The 3rd is your second substring (substr($1, 6, 4)).

The you can directly print the fields you have defined.

See https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/gawk.html#Constant-Size

2
  • Personally, I think your first clause is a deal breaker. FIELDWIDTHS should really only be used for fixed-width data processing.
    – Steve
    Feb 11, 2013 at 23:50
  • Which is particularly appropriate if the data is made of fixed-width fields... If the data to read is non overlapping, this is better that using several substr().
    – user1461760
    Feb 12, 2013 at 20:40
1

There is a delightful post explaining various ways of repeating string in awk.

I'll quote the most obvious:

function rep1(s,n,      r) {
# O(n) allocate/appends
# 2 lines of code
# This is the simplest possible solution that will work:
# just repeatedly append the input string onto the value
# that will be passed back, decrementing the input count
# until it reaches zero.
        while (n-->0) r = r s;
        return r;
}

PS: The large amount of space before function parameter in awk indicates that this parameter is used as temporary local variable.

1

Yes. You can simply save the substring to a variable, then re-print it as needed. Don't forget to set a null OFS:

awk '{ print substr($1, 1, 3), x = (substr($1, 6, 4)), x, x }' OFS=

Testing:

echo "qwertyuiop" | awk '{ print substr($1, 1, 3), x = (substr($1, 6, 4)), x, x }' OFS=

Results:

qweyuioyuioyuio

If you need to print something more than three or four times, it may be worthwhile using a for loop:

echo "qwertyuiop" | awk '{ for(i=1;i<=5;i++) x = x substr($1, 6, 4); print substr($1, 1, 3), x }' OFS=

Results:

qweyuioyuioyuioyuioyuio
0

This is one of the solutions to such a problem (messy but works).

 echo qwertyuiop | awk '{m=substr($1, 6, 4); {while (count++<3) string=string m; 
 print substr($1, 1, 3) string}}' 

 qweyuioyuioyuio

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