Similar question to many previous ones (including mine) but I can't find the solution. This is purely a syntax error and I cannot figure out how to make it work.
I have two files in Unix. In file1 I have 5 columns and about 6000 rows. I am trying to match rows in file2 to rows in file1 IF column 1 matches exactly AND if the value in row 5 of file1 is less than 0.00000005 for said row.
file1:
SNPs Context Intergenic Risk Allele Frequency p-Value
rs9747992 Intergenic 1 0.086 2.00E-07
rs2059865 Intron 0 0.235 3.00E-07
rs117020818 Intergenic 1 0.046 7.00E-07
rs1074145 Intergenic 1 0.162 4.00E-09
file2:
snpid hg18chr bp a1 a2 zscore pval CEUmaf
rs3131972 1 742584 A G 0.289 0.7726 .
rs3131969 1 744045 A G 0.393 0.6946 .
rs3131967 1 744197 T C 0.443 0.658 .
rs1048488 1 750775 T C -0.289 0.7726 .
I can do the first part BUT it keeps outputting a file that is larger than the first two. I am unsure if this is a real result file or just full of duplicates? I also cannot do the 'less than' command. I have tried putting it into the command as a second pattern and also piping it, as below:
awk 'FNR==NR{a[$1]=$0;next}{if ($1 in a) {print $0}}' file1 file2 > output | awk '{if (a[$5] < 0.00000005)}'
and
awk 'FNR==NR{a[$1]=$0;next}{if ($1 in a && $5 < 0.00000005)} {print $0}}' file1 file2 > output
Both times it's giving me the same size file which is much larger than either file1 or file2. If you want examples of the tables please just say.
Tentative solution:
A tentative solution I am using is to just make a new file containing only lines from file1 which have that <0.00000005 value. This works though I would like to know my original answer for posterity.
awk '$5<=0.00000005' file1 > file11
file2
, but you are usingFNR==NR
to load thefile1
into the search-target array. Try changing the tail-end of your 2nd cmd tofile2 file1 > output
. Good luck....file1 file2 > output | awk ...
is a shell non-sequitor. Nothing will happen with the code|awk ...
. You've already captured all the printed output with>output
. Your 2nd solution seems very close. will look at this for a few mins$1, $4
(or what ever) references back to $22 and $28 when you think the smaller test case is working correctly. Can you edit your question to deal with that? Add 3-4 lines of data for both files and you'll have a solution from numerous eager helpers ;-) Good luck.