1

I have text files that contain the following, with 'DOB' only mentioned once in the file....

DOB
Female 1/1/1963

In the example listed, I need to store Female in a variable called VarGender, and the date in a field called VarDOB. I'd like to end up with...

VarGender=Female
VarDOB=1/1/1963

The following will return the whole line below DOB. I could use some help in getting each half of the line into the right variable.

sed -n '/DOB/{n;p}' file.txt

Thank you very much.

6 Answers 6

2

Obligatory awk alternative:

awk '! /DOB/ { printf "VarGender=%s\nVarDOB=%s\n",$1,$2 }' file.txt
0

You just need to modify buffer before printing it:

$ sed -n '/DOB/{n;s/^\([^ ]\+\).*/\1/;p}' file.txt
Female
$ sed -n '/DOB/{n;s/^[^ ]\+ \(.*\)/\1/;p}' file.txt
1/1/1963
0
0

You can use this while loop:

while read -r line; do
    [[ "$line" == "DOB" ]] && dob=1 && continue
    ((dob==1)) && dob=0 && read VarGender VarDOB <<< "$line"
done < file

echo "$VarGender :: $VarDOB"
Female :: 1/1/1963
0

A simpler while loop.

while read field1 therest; do
  if [ ${field1:-x} = DOB ]; then
    read VarGender VarDOB;
    break;
  fi;
done < file
0
{ read; read VarGender VarDOB; } < file.txt

This would read it somewhere in the file:

while P=$VarGender; read VarGender VarDOB && [[ $P != DOB ]]; do :; done < file.txt
6
  • Or pipe the sed command into the second read if DOB... is not on the first two lines of the file.
    – ooga
    Aug 14, 2014 at 18:00
  • @ooga Calling sed is not necessary :) And you'd need process substitution for that since reading from a pipe would store variables on a subshell.
    – konsolebox
    Aug 14, 2014 at 18:02
  • I may have confused matters. I don't want to literally output VarGender=Female; I want a variable $VarGender to contain the value 'Female'. Thank you.
    – raparks
    Aug 14, 2014 at 18:35
  • @konsolebox I guess I don't understand how the first answer provides what I want.
    – raparks
    Aug 14, 2014 at 19:14
  • @raparks It redirects input from file as a block. read reads input line by line. so the first instance reads the first line, and the second instance the reads the second line which splits it to the two variables VarGender and VarDOB. You can read more info about the command with help read.
    – konsolebox
    Aug 14, 2014 at 19:19
0
$ arr=( $(awk 'f{print; exit} /DOB/{f=1}' file) )
$ VarGender="${arr[0]}"
$ VarDOB="${arr[1]}"
$ echo "$VarGender"
Female
$ echo "$VarDOB"
1/1/1963

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.