Here's an awk script that attempts to set difference of two files based on their first column:
BEGIN{
OFS=FS="\t"
file = ARGV[1]
while (getline < file)
Contained[$1] = $1
delete ARGV[1]
}
$1 not in Contained{
print $0
}
Here is TestFileA:
cat
dog
frog
Here is TestFileB:
ee
cat
dog
frog
However, when I run the following command:
gawk -f Diff.awk TestFileA TestFileB
I get the output just as if the script had contained "in":
cat
dog
frog
While I am uncertain about whether "not in" is correct syntax for my intent, I'm very curious about why it behaves exactly the same way as when I wrote "in".
indx in array
returnstrue
or0
(false) if theindx
is in or not in the array. So to negate that, use the!
operator. If this doesn't work, it's time to verify whether you are usinggnu awk
(which the documentation references) ormawk
(which is typically the default).