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I gather an array of numbers like this

values=`sed -n "3,6p" STAT_EE/table_EE'.tex' | awk '{ print $4}'`

val=`sed -n "8,12p" STAT_EE/table_EE'.tex' | awk '{ print $4}'`

and then I want to print this to variables in columns. I tried with echo -en "$values\t$val but it prints the two variables as a one single array I also tried with printf but it did not work.

Could you please help me with this concern? Thank's a lot

1 Answer 1

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First, the variables that you have defined are not bash arrays; they are bash strings. To make arrays, enclose the expressions in parentheses:

values=(`sed -n "3,6p" STAT_EE/table_EE'.tex' | awk '{ print $4}'`)    
val=(`sed -n "8,12p" STAT_EE/table_EE'.tex' | awk '{ print $4}'`)

To print them out in two columns:

for ((i=0;i<${#values[@]};i++))
do
    echo "${values[i]}  ${val[i]}"
done

or:

for i in $( seq 0 $((${#values[@]}-1)) )
do
    echo "${values[i]}  ${val[i]}"
done

Advanced Topics

Because the backtick notation is fragile and does not nest well, the %(...) construct is generally preferred. Also, in the sed-awk code above, sed is only being used to select and range of lines. That is something that awk does very well. So, the code can simplify to:

values=( $(awk 'NR>=3 && NR<=6{ print $4}' STAT_EE/table_EE.tex) )
val=( $(awk 'NR>=8 && NR<=12{ print $4}' STAT_EE/table_EE.tex) )
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  • You don't need sed with awk and its best to avoid deprecated backtick syntax: values=( $(awk 'NR>=3 && NR<=6{ print $4}' STAT_EE/table_EE'.tex') )
    – Ed Morton
    Oct 5, 2014 at 1:40
  • Thank you John1024. I really appreciate your help :). Thanks for the additional comments Ed Morton :).
    – Pablor
    Oct 5, 2014 at 13:55

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