5

I have a simple awk script named "script.awk" that contains:

/\/some_simple_string/ { print $0;}

I'm using it to parse some file that contains: (by using: cat file | awk -f script.awk)

14 catcat one_two/some_thing
15 catcat one_three/one_more_some_simple_string
16 dogdog one_two/some_simple_string_again
17 dogdog one_four/some_simple_string
18 qweqwe firefire/ppp

I want the script to only print the stroke that fully reflect "/some_simple_string[END_OF_LINE]" but not 2 or 3. Is there any simple way to do it?

I think, the most appropriate way is to add end-of-line sigh to the regular expression. So it will parse only strokes that starting with "/some.." and have a new line at the end of "..string[END_OF_LINE]"

Desired output:

17 dogdog one_four/some_simple_string

Sorry for confusion, I was asking for END OF LINE sign in regular expressions. The correct answer is:

/\/some_simple_string$/ { print $0;}
6
  • What do you call a row? In that case what is the desired output ?
    – lc2817
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:36
  • That was very confusing with the original formulation of the question, sorry.
    – lc2817
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:55
  • Basically my fault, poor description, sorry for that. Sep 19, 2013 at 7:56
  • In that case you don't need awk at all just grep '/some_simple_string$' Sep 19, 2013 at 8:03
  • Actually, the original issue was a bit more than that (I've just tried to simplify it). Basically, I wanted to print next string after the expression matched, so I'm using: { getline; print "something=" $0;} Sep 19, 2013 at 8:05

6 Answers 6

6

You can always use:

/\/some_simple_string$/ { print $0 }

I.e. match not only "some_simple_string" but match "/some_simple_string" followed by the end of the line ($ is end of line in regex)

4
  • That is probably what I've been looking for. I used to use: \\<some_simple_string\>\, but unfortunately it works only in gawk but not in awk. Sep 19, 2013 at 7:49
  • @MikhailKalashnikov this answer won't print the last match only, I thought that is what you wanted? Also this will work with any POSIX compliant awk not just gawk. Sep 19, 2013 at 7:57
  • Unfortunately, It didn't work in awk v1.6, and I wanted it to be as portable as possible. Sep 19, 2013 at 7:59
  • Warning: If your file has Windows line endings (\r\n), this might not work as expected. I suggest adding a \s* or similar (it depends on your dataset of course) to the end before the $. Apr 26, 2018 at 14:26
3

grep '\some_simple_string$' file | tail -n 1 should do the trick.

Or if you really want to use awk do awk '/\/some_simple_string/{x = $0}END{print x}'

1
  • Both of these just print the last line the file not the last line matching the regular expression Sep 19, 2013 at 7:47
3

To return just the last of a group of matches, ...

Store the line in a variable and print it in the END block.

/some_simple_string/ { x = $0 }
END{ print x }
4
  • 1
    why not END{print} using the fact that $0 is set at each line and that print implicitly prints $0?
    – lc2817
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:41
  • I forgot about that. Haven't really used awk in a while. :) Sep 19, 2013 at 7:42
  • 2
    END {print} is NOT a good solution. It will print any last line, why do the search then?? File may contain other string at last line than some_simple_string. Do use END{ print x }
    – Jotne
    Sep 19, 2013 at 8:08
  • @luserdroog it seems this is not what the OP wants after all. Sep 19, 2013 at 9:12
1

To print all the matches that end with the string /some_simple_string using regular expression you need to anchor to the the end of the line using $. The most suitable tool for this job is grep:

$ grep '/some_simple_string$' file

In awk the command is much the same:

$ awk '/[/]some_simple_string$/' file

To print all lines after the matching you would do:

$ awk 'print_flag{print;f=0} /[/]some_simple_string$/{print_flag=1}' file

Or just combine grep and tail if it makes it clearer using context option -A to print the following lines:

$ grep -A1 '/some_simple_string$' file | tail -n 1
2
  • What is print_flag? Is that an awk command or something you invented?
    – not2qubit
    Aug 25, 2023 at 18:03
  • Just a variable name I choose. Aug 29, 2023 at 21:43
1

I sometimes find that the input records can have a trailing carriage return (\r). Yes, I deal with both Windows and Linux text files. So I add the following 'pre-processor' to my awk scripts:

1 == 1 { # preprocess all records
  res = gsub("\r", "") # remove unwanted trailing char
  if(res>0 && NR<100) { print "(removed stuff)" > "/dev/stderr" } # optional
}
0
0

more optimally, let FS do the work instead of having it perform unnecessary and unrelated field splitting (adding the \r bit for Windows/DOS completeness):

mawk '!_<NF' FS='[/]some_simple_string[\r]?$'             
17 dogdog one_four/some_simple_string

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