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 $0;}
awk
at all justgrep '/some_simple_string$'