4

I have a file with the following layout:

123,01-08-2006
124,01-09-2007
125,01-10-2009
126,01-12-2010

How can I convert it into the following by using AWK?

123,2006-08-01
124,2007-09-01
125,2009-10-01
126,2009-12-01
2
  • I reworded your question, and decided to alter wording of "reverse a string". What you do is not reversing a string, but reversing the order of fields, separated by non-word characters. Feel free to propose a better wording if I guessed what's your aim incorrectly.
    – P Shved
    Aug 1, 2010 at 11:29
  • 1
    Possible duplicate of Elegant way to reverse column order May 30, 2017 at 8:28

4 Answers 4

4

Didn't read the question properly the first time. You need a field separator that can be either a dash or a comma. Once you have that you can use the dash as an output field separator (as it's the most common) and fake the comma using concatenation:

awk -F',|-' 'OFS="-" {print $1 "," $4,$3,$2}' file
1
  • he wants to reorder the date field
    – ghostdog74
    Aug 1, 2010 at 11:40
2

Pure awk

awk -F"," '{ n=split($2,b,"-");$2=b[3]"-"b[2]"-"b[1];$i=$1","$2 } 1' file

sed

sed -r 's/(^.[^,]*,)([0-9]{2})-([0-9]{2})-([0-9]{4})/\1\4-\3-\2/' file
sed 's/\(^.[^,]*,\)\([0-9][0-9]\)-\([0-9][0-9]\)-\([0-9]\+\)/\1\4-\3-\2/' file

Bash

#!/bin/bash

while IFS="," read -r a b
do
  IFS="-"
  set -- $b
  echo "$a,$3-$2-$1"
done <"file"
1
  • Hi i am getting the below error while executing "sed: illegal option -- r"
    – user400480
    Aug 1, 2010 at 11:35
1

Unfortunately, I think standard awk only allows one field separator character so you'll have to pre-process the data. You can do this with tr but if you really want an awk-only solution, use:

pax> echo '123,01-08-2006
124,01-09-2007
125,01-10-2009
126,01-12-2010' | awk -F, '{print $1"-"$2}' | awk -F- '{print $1","$4"-"$3"-"$2}'

This outputs:

123,2006-08-01
124,2007-09-01
125,2009-10-01
126,2010-12-01

as desired.

The first awk changes the , characters to - so that you have four fields separated with the same character (this is the bit I'd usually use tr ',' '-' for).

The second awk prints them out in the order you specified, correcting the field separators at the same time.

If you're using an awk implementation that allows multiple FS characters, you can use something like:

gawk -F ',|-' '{print $1","$4"-"$3"-"$2}'
0

If it doesn't need to be awk, you could use Perl too:

$ perl -nle 'print "$1,$4-$3-$2" while (/(\d{3}),(\d{2})-(\d{2})-(\d{4})\s*/g)' < file.txt

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