82

I have the following three constructs in a bash script:

NUMOFLINES=$(wc -l $JAVA_TAGS_FILE)
echo $NUMOFLINES" lines"

echo $(wc -l $JAVA_TAGS_FILE)" lines"

echo "$(wc -l $JAVA_TAGS_FILE) lines"

And they both produce identical output when the script is run:

121711 /home/slash/.java_base.tag lines
121711 /home/slash/.java_base.tag lines
121711 /home/slash/.java_base.tag lines

I.e. the name of the file is also echoed (which I don't want to). Why do these scriplets fail and how should I output a clean:

121711 lines

?

1

6 Answers 6

160

An Example Using Your Own Data

You can avoid having your filename embedded in the NUMOFLINES variable by using redirection from JAVA_TAGS_FILE, rather than passing the filename as an argument to wc. For example:

NUMOFLINES=$(wc -l < "$JAVA_TAGS_FILE")

Explanation: Use Pipes or Redirection to Avoid Filenames in Output

The wc utility will not print the name of the file in its output if input is taken from a pipe or redirection operator. Consider these various examples:

# wc shows filename when the file is an argument
$ wc -l /etc/passwd
41 /etc/passwd

# filename is ignored when piped in on standard input
$ cat /etc/passwd | wc -l
41

# unusual redirection, but wc still ignores the filename
$ < /etc/passwd wc -l
41

# typical redirection, taking standard input from a file
$ wc -l < /etc/passwd
41

As you can see, the only time wc will print the filename is when its passed as an argument, rather than as data on standard input. In some cases, you may want the filename to be printed, so it's useful to understand when it will be displayed.

1
  • 2
    beware that this approach will not include the last line if the last line does not terminate by end of line character. See my fix below.
    – ling
    Oct 18, 2015 at 5:33
15

wc can't get the filename if you don't give it one.

wc -l < "$JAVA_TAGS_FILE"
1
  • 2
    Well, then don't. Just pass the file to wc's stdin as shown in the answer. So cat "$JAVA_TAGS_FILE" | wc -l or, equivalently, wc -l < "$JAVA_TAGS_FILE". This way, wc only gets raw data, not the filename.
    – Witiko
    Jul 4, 2013 at 14:23
12

You can also use awk:

awk 'END {print NR,"lines"}' filename

Or

awk 'END {print NR}' filename

6

(apply on Mac, and probably other Unixes)

Actually there is a problem with the wc approach: it does not count the last line if it does not terminate with the end of line symbol.

Use this instead

nbLines=$(cat -n file.txt | tail -n 1 | cut -f1 | xargs)

or even better (thanks gniourf_gniourf):

nblines=$(grep -c '' file.txt)

Note: The awk approach by chilicuil also works.

3
  • 3
    Very convoluted method! Maybe you'll want nblines=$(grep -c '' file) instead (which is the canonical way of counting incomplete lines in this case). Note though that according to POSIX, you're counting the incomplete lines (and not the lines). You're in fact dealing with a binary file and not a text file. Oct 18, 2015 at 6:33
  • @gniourf_gniourf Thanks, I didn't know about that, it works great and is even more concise.
    – ling
    Oct 19, 2015 at 7:39
  • it maybe better solution nblines=$(($(cat "file.txt" | wc -l) + 1)) Sep 9, 2016 at 23:52
3

It's a very simple:

NUMOFLINES=$(cat $JAVA_TAGS_FILE | wc -l )

or

NUMOFLINES=$(wc -l $JAVA_TAGS_FILE | awk '{print $1}')
2
  • The first is useless use of cat.
    – kap
    Mar 15, 2019 at 11:26
  • @kap No, it only looks like this. If you get rid of cat, you would have the 2nd example then because wc -l returns 2 columns when it's being used with a file only. Mar 16, 2019 at 16:42
-3

I normally use the 'back tick' feature of bash

export NUM_LINES=`wc -l filename`

Note the 'tick' is the 'back tick' e.g. ` not the normal single quote

1
  • 5
    That's just a different notation, and doesn't solve the issue of the file name being part of the result.
    – Izzy
    Jan 1, 2015 at 19:57

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.