141

Is there any way under linux/terminal to count, how many times the char f occurs in a plain text file?

2
  • 9
    Technically this could be considered a sh/bash/etc. programming question, so I think it has validity in either place.
    – Rob Hruska
    Oct 21, 2009 at 21:51
  • @Rob Hruska: yes, I also think is bash programming... @abrashka: the answer for your first and second question is "NO"!
    – cupakob
    Oct 22, 2009 at 7:33

5 Answers 5

188

How about this:

fgrep -o f <file> | wc -l

Note: Besides much easier to remember/duplicate and customize, this is about three times (sorry, edit! botched the first test) faster than Vereb's answer.

5
  • This one doesn't work if you need to count \r or \n characters; the tr -cd f answer does work for that.
    – bjnord
    Oct 5, 2013 at 0:08
  • 3
    To count several characters, e.g. a, b and c, use egrep : egrep -o 'a|b|c' <file> | wc -l. Apr 3, 2017 at 13:29
  • Also, beware to NOT use wc -c as in the tr answer : since grep outputs line by line, wc would count end-of-lines as characters (hence doubling the number of characters). Apr 3, 2017 at 13:34
  • @bjnord Ok for \r, but to count \n why not just use wc -l ? Apr 3, 2017 at 13:35
  • Warning: fgrep is obsolescent; use grep -F. e.g. grep -oF f <file> | wc -l
    – Qumber
    Nov 19, 2022 at 9:49
76

even faster:

tr -cd f < file | wc -c

Time for this command with a file with 4.9 MB and 1100000 occurences of the searched character:

real   0m0.089s
user   0m0.057s
sys    0m0.027s

Time for Vereb answer with echo, cat, tr and bc for the same file:

real   0m0.168s
user   0m0.059s
sys    0m0.115s

Time for Rob Hruska answer with tr, sed and wc for the same file:

real   0m0.465s
user   0m0.411s
sys    0m0.080s

Time for Jefromi answer with fgrep and wc for the same file:

real   0m0.522s
user   0m0.477s
sys    0m0.023s 
2
  • 3
    To count several characters, e.g. a, b and c : tr -cd abc < file | wc -l. Apr 3, 2017 at 13:26
  • 1
    are you sure? wasn't suppose to be tr -cd abc < file | wc -c instead
    – Mithun B
    May 9, 2020 at 18:36
10
echo $(cat <file>  | wc -c) - $(cat <file>  | tr -d 'A' | wc -c) | bc

where the A is the character

Time for this command with a file with 4.9 MB and 1100000 occurences of the searched character:

real   0m0.168s
user   0m0.059s
sys    0m0.115s
3
  • 1
    This gets about a third faster if you take out the unnecessary cat s, giving the filename as an argument to wc and tr.
    – Cascabel
    Oct 21, 2009 at 21:49
  • 1
    If you realy want to optimize this reads the file just once: echo $(stat -c%s <file>) - $(cat <file> | tr -d 'A' | wc -c) | bc
    – Vereb
    Oct 21, 2009 at 22:01
  • @Vereb - tr only reads stdin, but that can be piped rather than cated: tr -d 'A' < <file> | wc ...
    – dsz
    Nov 16, 2015 at 4:28
8

If all you need to do is count the number of lines containing your character, this will work:

grep -c 'f' myfile

However, it counts multiple occurrences of 'f' on the same line as a single match.

4

tr -d '\n' < file | sed 's/A/A\n/g' | wc -l

Replacing the two occurrences of "A" with your character, and "file" with your input file.

  • tr -d '\n' < file: removes newlines
  • sed 's/A/A\n/g: adds a newline after every occurrence of "A"
  • wc -l: counts the number of lines

Example:

$ cat file
abcdefgabcdefgababababbbba


1234gabca

$ tr -d '\n' < file | sed 's/a/a\n/g' | wc -l
9

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