161

Using awk, I need to find a word in a file that matches a regex pattern.

I only want to print the word matched with the pattern.

So if in the line, I have:

xxx yyy zzz

And pattern:

/yyy/

I want to only get:

yyy

EDIT: thanks to kurumi i managed to write something like this:

awk '{
        for(i=1; i<=NF; i++) {
                tmp=match($i, /[0-9]..?.?[^A-Za-z0-9]/)
                if(tmp) {
                        print $i
                }
        }
}' $1

and this is what i needed :) thanks a lot!

2
  • 3
    @maxtaldykin Could you move your self-answer from the question into separate answer please?
    – kenorb
    Feb 14, 2018 at 20:35
  • 2
    You don't need to do tmp=match($i, /regexp);if(tmp){}, you should just be able to do if(tmp ~ $i){} because ~ means "matches the regexp".
    – JustinCB
    Jun 26, 2018 at 13:23

9 Answers 9

197

This is the very basic

awk '/pattern/{ print $0 }' file

ask awk to search for pattern using //, then print out the line, which by default is called a record, denoted by $0. At least read up the documentation.

If you only want to get print out the matched word.

awk '{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++){ if($i=="yyy"){print $i} } }' file
8
  • 65
    Since print is the default action: awk '/pattern/' file will suffice.
    – johnsyweb
    Apr 4, 2011 at 8:22
  • 26
    @Johnsyweb, yes I do know this fact. To a beginner like marverix, its meant to be more visual.
    – kurumi
    Apr 4, 2011 at 8:25
  • 33
    I don't doubt your knowledge. The information may be useful to others finding this answer, however.
    – johnsyweb
    Apr 4, 2011 at 8:42
  • 3
    N.B: @marverix will have to a little more homework to get the for-loop to work if (a) "yyy" is a regular expression and not a straight string and (b) if that "yyy" does not match an entire field within a record.
    – johnsyweb
    Apr 4, 2011 at 9:28
  • 14
    It wouldn't be $i=="yyy"; it would be $i ~ /yyy/ for a regular expression.
    – JustinCB
    Jun 26, 2018 at 13:20
173

It sounds like you are trying to emulate GNU's grep -o behaviour. This will do that providing you only want the first match on each line:

awk 'match($0, /regex/) {
    print substr($0, RSTART, RLENGTH)
}
' file

Here's an example, using GNU's awk implementation ():

awk 'match($0, /a.t/) {
    print substr($0, RSTART, RLENGTH)
}
' /usr/share/dict/words | head
act
act
act
act
aft
ant
apt
art
art
art

Read about match, substr, RSTART and RLENGTH in the awk manual.

After that you may wish to extend this to deal with multiple matches on the same line.

10
  • N.B: To answer that last part, all of the constructs needed are in kurumi's answer and my own.
    – johnsyweb
    Apr 4, 2011 at 10:04
  • Great answer. Just I would like an explanation here in place because I am lazy. But that's why I am using AWK! Aug 22, 2014 at 22:08
  • What if i want to do something with the match result except of print it? For example, i want to add all the matches into array.
    – Evya2005
    Jun 4, 2017 at 9:41
  • @evya2005: You could simply replace the call Ron print with the assignment you need.
    – johnsyweb
    Jun 4, 2017 at 10:45
  • 1
    I made the change. Super minor. I hope you don't mind. Also, very nice answer. I couldn't find an awk-compatible (instead of using gawk extensions) example this clear anywhere else. Thank you. This appears to be exactly what I was looking for. May 25, 2020 at 4:12
51

gawk can get the matching part of every line using this as action:

{ if (match($0,/your regexp/,m)) print m[0] }

match(string, regexp [, array]) If array is present, it is cleared, and then the zeroth element of array is set to the entire portion of string matched by regexp. If regexp contains parentheses, the integer-indexed elements of array are set to contain the portion of string matching the corresponding parenthesized subexpression. http://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/gawk.html#String-Functions

20

If Perl is an option, you can try this:

perl -lne 'print $1 if /(regex)/' file

To implement case-insensitive matching, add the i modifier

perl -lne 'print $1 if /(regex)/i' file

To print everything AFTER the match:

perl -lne 'if ($found){print} else{if (/regex(.*)/){print $1; $found++}}' textfile

To print the match and everything after the match:

perl -lne 'if ($found){print} else{if (/(regex.*)/){print $1; $found++}}' textfile
1
  • 1
    This actually did exactly what I wanted. Was not able to make it work with awk to print my match, but perl did the trick.
    – lotjuh
    Jun 18, 2021 at 8:58
18

If you are only interested in the last line of input and you expect to find only one match (for example a part of the summary line of a shell command), you can also try this very compact code, adopted from How to print regexp matches using `awk`?:

$ echo "xxx yyy zzz" | awk '{match($0,"yyy",a)}END{print a[0]}'
yyy

Or the more complex version with a partial result:

$ echo "xxx=a yyy=b zzz=c" | awk '{match($0,"yyy=([^ ]+)",a)}END{print a[1]}'
b

Warning: the awk match() function with three arguments only exists in gawk, not in mawk

Here is another nice solution using a lookbehind regex in grep instead of awk. This solution has lower requirements to your installation:

$ echo "xxx=a yyy=b zzz=c" | grep -Po '(?<=yyy=)[^ ]+'
b
2
  • Why did you add "tail -n1"? This should work fine without it, no? Jul 13, 2018 at 18:18
  • 2
    @ArthurAccioly Correct. I used the term to extract the average roundtrip time from a ping call, that's where it came from. funny that it took 4 years to discover it ;) Jul 14, 2018 at 19:23
12

Off topic, this can be done using the grep also, just posting it here in case if anyone is looking for grep solution

echo 'xxx yyy zzze ' | grep -oE 'yyy'
2
  • Simple way to grab it even with regex. Exactly what I needed. Thanks!
    – Marquee
    Jul 7, 2020 at 17:57
  • 1
    This works for me; My case is like: echo "web_port=8080,shutdown_port=8005" | grep -oE "web_port=[0-9]+" # return 8080
    – Robb Tsang
    Jul 22, 2020 at 8:50
5

Using sed can also be elegant in this situation. Example (replace line with matched group "yyy" from line):

$ cat testfile
xxx yyy zzz
yyy xxx zzz
$ cat testfile | sed -r 's#^.*(yyy).*$#\1#g'
yyy
yyy

Relevant manual page: https://www.gnu.org/software/sed/manual/sed.html#Back_002dreferences-and-Subexpressions

2
  • 1
    For non-gnu sed the solution is something like this: sed -n 's/^.*\(yyy\).*$/\1/gp' < testfile Nov 11, 2018 at 2:58
  • 1
    @GrigoryEntin - bsd sed works fine with the original answer. The extended regex switch supported by POSIX is -E, but in FreeBSD at least -r is the same as -E (-r added in 2010). Anyway, try with -E (gnu sed added -E in 4.3)
    – Juan
    Sep 6, 2019 at 0:44
0

If you know what column the text/pattern you're looking for (e.g. "yyy") is in, you can just check that specific column to see if it matches, and print it.

For example, given a file with the following contents, (called asdf.txt)

xxx yyy zzz

to only print the second column if it matches the pattern "yyy", you could do something like this:

awk '$2 ~ /yyy/ {print $2}' asdf.txt

Note that this will also match basically any line where the second column has a "yyy" in it, like these:

xxx yyyz zzz
xxx zyyyz
0
echo "abc123def" | awk '

function MATCH(haystack, needle, ltrim, rtrim)
{
if(ltrim == 0 && !length(ltrim))
  ltrim = 0;

if(rtrim == 0 && !length(rtrim))
  rtrim = 0;

return substr(haystack, match(haystack, needle) + ltrim, RLENGTH - ltrim - rtrim);
}
    
{
print $0 " - " MATCH($0, "123");             # 123
print $0 " - " MATCH($0, "[0-9]*d", 0, 1);   # 123
print $0 " - " MATCH($0, "1234");            # Nothing printed
}'

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