It would be best to read through the file once, and write each line to the file where it should go. So the solution by @steve using AWK is a good one.
You could solve this problem using grep
and an appropriate regular expression: ^.......2010
would only match lines that have 2010
in the year position. Then a shell script could loop over the years and keep running grep
, something like this:
for year in 2010 2011 2012; do
grep "^.......$year" datafile > $year.txt
done
But it's not elegant because it reads the whole source file once per year.
Here's a Python solution to go along with the AWK one.
import sys
def next_line():
if len(sys.argv) == 1:
for line in sys.stdin:
yield line
else:
for name in sys.argv[1:]:
with open(name) as f:
for line in f:
yield line
_open_files = {}
def output(fname, line):
if fname not in _open_files:
_open_files[fname] = open(fname, "w")
_open_files[fname].write(line)
for line in next_line():
year = line[7:11]
fname = year + ".txt"
output(fname, line)
AWK certainly wins for brevity. I had to implement function next_line()
to provide a service that offers up source lines from each file in turn, or standard input if you didn't specify a file; with AWK you get that for free. I had to implement function output()
to let you just provide a filename and a string and write the output, but with AWK you get that for free.
If your problem will not ever get more complicated you could use the AWK solution, but if you expect to add more bells and whistles as time goes by, the Python solution might pay off. (That's why I love Python... once you have it working, it's easy to extend it no matter what you need to do.)