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I want to remove duplicate entries from a text file, e.g:

kavitha= Tue Feb    20 14:00 19 IST 2012  (duplicate entry) 
sree=Tue Jan  20 14:05 19 IST 2012  
divya = Tue Jan  20 14:20 19 IST 2012  
anusha=Tue Jan 20 14:45 19 IST 2012 
kavitha= Tue Feb    20 14:00 19 IST 2012 (duplicate entry) 

Is there any possible way to remove the duplicate entries using a Bash script?

Desired output

kavitha= Tue Feb    20 14:00 19 IST 2012 
sree=Tue Jan  20 14:05 19 IST 2012  
divya = Tue Jan  20 14:20 19 IST 2012  
anusha=Tue Jan 20 14:45 19 IST 2012
1
  • 4
    Ironic that this question itself is a duplicate... Sep 13, 2021 at 14:26

4 Answers 4

492

You can sort then uniq:

$ sort -u input.txt

Or use awk:

$ awk '!a[$0]++' input.txt
10
  • 69
    Testing with an 18,500 line text file: sort ... takes about 0.57s whereas awk ... takes about 0.08s because awk ... just removes duplicates without sorting.
    – Hugo
    Oct 19, 2013 at 12:38
  • 5
    @Hugo I can second that. Testing against 2,626,198 lines awk beats sort. Results show awk taking 5.675s and sort taking 5.675s. Interestingly enough the same record set took 15.1 seconds to perform a MySQL DISTINCT query on. Feb 11, 2016 at 19:13
  • 1
    @Hugo is there an elegant way to make this work with case insensitive? or is it better to just convert the entire doc to lowercase, then run this?
    – Onichan
    Jun 9, 2016 at 2:55
  • 6
    tested with 24 million rows, awk did not come to a result within 20 minutes. sort + uniq did the job in some secs.
    – bhelm
    Jul 4, 2016 at 15:12
  • 10
    I downvoted this because, although poster is happy, folks could be confused by an answer that does not yield the desired output, as it sorts the input
    – lab419
    Dec 17, 2017 at 16:54
21

It deletes duplicate, consecutive lines from a file (emulates "uniq").
First line in a set of duplicate lines is kept, rest are deleted.

sed '$!N; /^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P; D'
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  • 2
    worked for me, One more addition for other use, If you want to change the file itself here is the command sed -i '$!N; /^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P; D' <FileName> Oct 21, 2015 at 6:43
  • 2
    This is awesome !!
    – Arnab
    Apr 24, 2019 at 20:29
  • what is $!N; ? Oct 18, 2021 at 17:29
13

Perl one-liner similar to @kev's awk solution:

perl -ne 'print if ! $a{$_}++' input

This variation removes trailing whitespace before comparing:

perl -lne 's/\s*$//; print if ! $a{$_}++' input

This variation edits the file in-place:

perl -i -ne 'print if ! $a{$_}++' input

This variation edits the file in-place, and makes a backup input.bak

perl -i.bak -ne 'print if ! $a{$_}++' input
2
  • 1
    I like the Perl solution because it allows me to add extra conditions, e.g. only enforce uniqueness on lines matching a certain pattern. Oct 11, 2018 at 4:10
  • Is perl -i -ne 'print if ! $a{$_}++' input faster (in genereal) than gawk -i inplace '!a[$0]++' input?
    – pmor
    May 16, 2023 at 18:27
0

This might work for you:

cat -n file.txt |
sort -u -k2,7 |
sort -n |
sed 's/.*\t/    /;s/\([0-9]\{4\}\).*/\1/'

or this:

 awk '{line=substr($0,1,match($0,/[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]/)+3);sub(/^/,"    ",line);if(!dup[line]++)print line}' file.txt

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