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Is there a way to delete duplicate lines in a file in Unix?

I can do it with sort -u and uniq commands, but I want to use sed or awk.

Is that possible?

4

9 Answers 9

394
awk '!seen[$0]++' file.txt

seen is an associative array that AWK will pass every line of the file to. If a line isn't in the array then seen[$0] will evaluate to false. The ! is the logical NOT operator and will invert the false to true. AWK will print the lines where the expression evaluates to true.

The ++ increments seen so that seen[$0] == 1 after the first time a line is found and then seen[$0] == 2, and so on. AWK evaluates everything but 0 and "" (empty string) to true. If a duplicate line is placed in seen then !seen[$0] will evaluate to false and the line will not be written to the output.

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  • 7
    To save it in a file we can do this awk '!seen[$0]++' merge_all.txt > output.txt Jul 19, 2018 at 11:42
  • 8
    An important caveat here: if you need to do this for multiple files, and you tack more files on the end of the command, or use a wildcard… the 'seen' array will fill up with duplicate lines from ALL the files. If you instead want to treat each file independently, you'll need to do something like for f in *.txt; do gawk -i inplace '!seen[$0]++' "$f"; done
    – Nick K9
    Jan 17, 2019 at 18:05
  • 2
    @NickK9 that de-duping cumulatively across multiple files is awesome in itself. Nice tip
    – sfscs
    Jan 14, 2020 at 21:05
  • 2
    It also works thanks to the fact that the result of '++' operator is not the value after increment, but the previous value.
    – honzajde
    Nov 11, 2020 at 11:29
37

From http://sed.sourceforge.net/sed1line.txt: (Please don't ask me how this works ;-) )

 # delete 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'

 # delete duplicate, nonconsecutive lines from a file. Beware not to
 # overflow the buffer size of the hold space, or else use GNU sed.
 sed -n 'G; s/\n/&&/; /^\([ -~]*\n\).*\n\1/d; s/\n//; h; P'
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  • 1
    geekery;-) +1, but resource consumption is inavoidable. Sep 18, 2009 at 13:16
  • 3
    '$!N; /^(.*)\n\1$/!P; D' means "If you're not at the last line, read in another line. Now look at what you have and if it ISN'T stuff followed by a newline and then the same stuff again, print out the stuff. Now delete the stuff (up to the newline)."
    – Beta
    Sep 18, 2009 at 15:30
  • 2
    'G; s/\n/&&/; /^([ -~]*\n).*\n\1/d; s/\n//; h; P' means, roughly, "Append the whole hold space this line, then if you see a duplicated line throw the whole thing out, otherwise copy the whole mess back into the hold space and print the first part (which is the line you just read."
    – Beta
    Sep 18, 2009 at 15:41
  • Is the $! part necessary? Doesn't sed 'N; /^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P; D' do the same thing? I can't come up with an example where the two are different on my machine (fwiw I did try an empty line at the end with both versions and they were both fine).
    – eddi
    Jul 24, 2012 at 16:16
  • 3
    Almost 7 years later and no one answered @amichair ... <sniff> makes me sad. ;) Anyways, [ -~] represents a range of ASCII characters from 0x20 (space) to 0x7E (tilde). These are considered the printable ASCII characters (linked page also has 0x7F/delete but that doesn't seem right). That makes the solution broken for anyone not using ASCII or anyone using, say, tab characters.. The more portable [^\n] includes a whole lot more characters...all of 'em except one, in fact.
    – B Layer
    Dec 14, 2019 at 7:15
25

Perl one-liner similar to jonas's AWK solution:

perl -ne 'print if ! $x{$_}++' file

This variation removes trailing white space before comparing:

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

This variation edits the file in-place:

perl -i -ne 'print if ! $x{$_}++' file

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

perl -i.bak -ne 'print if ! $x{$_}++' file
2
  • How to redirect otuput to stdout? Piping does not work with this approach.
    – Al Bundy
    Feb 27, 2021 at 11:23
  • My original answer outputs to stdout, as well as the first variation Feb 27, 2021 at 18:20
8

An alternative way using Vim (Vi compatible):

Delete duplicate, consecutive lines from a file:

vim -esu NONE +'g/\v^(.*)\n\1$/d' +wq

Delete duplicate, nonconsecutive and nonempty lines from a file:

vim -esu NONE +'g/\v^(.+)$\_.{-}^\1$/d' +wq

6

The one-liner that Andre Miller posted works except for recent versions of sed when the input file ends with a blank line and no characterss. On my Mac my CPU just spins.

This is an infinite loop if the last line is blank and doesn't have any characterss:

sed '$!N; /^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P; D'

It doesn't hang, but you lose the last line:

sed '$d;N; /^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P; D'

The explanation is at the very end of the sed FAQ:

The GNU sed maintainer felt that despite the portability problems
this would cause, changing the N command to print (rather than
delete) the pattern space was more consistent with one's intuitions
about how a command to "append the Next line" ought to behave.
Another fact favoring the change was that "{N;command;}" will
delete the last line if the file has an odd number of lines, but
print the last line if the file has an even number of lines.

To convert scripts which used the former behavior of N (deleting
the pattern space upon reaching the EOF) to scripts compatible with
all versions of sed, change a lone "N;" to "$d;N;".

5

The first solution is also from http://sed.sourceforge.net/sed1line.txt

$ echo -e '1\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n4\n4\n4\n4\n5' |sed -nr '$!N;/^(.*)\n\1$/!P;D'
1
2
3
4
5

The core idea is:

Print only once of each duplicate consecutive lines at its last appearance and use the D command to implement the loop.

Explanation:

  1. $!N;: if the current line is not the last line, use the N command to read the next line into the pattern space.
  2. /^(.*)\n\1$/!P: if the contents of the current pattern space is two duplicate strings separated by \n, which means the next line is the same with current line, we can not print it according to our core idea; otherwise, which means the current line is the last appearance of all of its duplicate consecutive lines. We can now use the P command to print the characters in the current pattern space until \n (\n also printed).
  3. D: we use the D command to delete the characters in the current pattern space until \n (\n also deleted), and then the content of pattern space is the next line.
  4. and the D command will force sed to jump to its first command $!N, but not read the next line from a file or standard input stream.

The second solution is easy to understand (from myself):

$ echo -e '1\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n4\n4\n4\n4\n5' |sed -nr 'p;:loop;$!N;s/^(.*)\n\1$/\1/;tloop;D'
1
2
3
4
5

The core idea is:

print only once of each duplicate consecutive lines at its first appearance and use the : command and t command to implement LOOP.

Explanation:

  1. read a new line from the input stream or file and print it once.
  2. use the :loop command to set a label named loop.
  3. use N to read the next line into the pattern space.
  4. use s/^(.*)\n\1$/\1/ to delete the current line if the next line is the same with the current line. We use the s command to do the delete action.
  5. if the s command is executed successfully, then use the tloop command to force sed to jump to the label named loop, which will do the same loop to the next lines until there are no duplicate consecutive lines of the line which is latest printed; otherwise, use the D command to delete the line which is the same with the latest-printed line, and force sed to jump to the first command, which is the p command. The content of the current pattern space is the next new line.
1
  • same command on Windows with busybox: busybox echo -e "1\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n4\n4\n4\n4\n5" | busybox sed -nr "$!N;/^(.*)\n\1$/!P;D"
    – scavenger
    Feb 24, 2020 at 2:21
2

uniq would be fooled by trailing spaces and tabs. In order to emulate how a human makes comparison, I am trimming all trailing spaces and tabs before comparison.

I think that the $!N; needs curly braces or else it continues, and that is the cause of the infinite loop.

I have Bash 5.0 and sed 4.7 in Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla). The second one-liner did not work, at the character set match.

The are three variations. The first is to eliminate adjacent repeat lines, the second to eliminate repeat lines wherever they occur, and the third to eliminate all but the last instance of lines in file.

pastebin

# First line in a set of duplicate lines is kept, rest are deleted.
# Emulate human eyes on trailing spaces and tabs by trimming those.
# Use after norepeat() to dedupe blank lines.

dedupe() {
 sed -E '
  $!{
   N;
   s/[ \t]+$//;
   /^(.*)\n\1$/!P;
   D;
  }
 ';
}

# Delete duplicate, nonconsecutive lines from a file. Ignore blank
# lines. Trailing spaces and tabs are trimmed to humanize comparisons
# squeeze blank lines to one

norepeat() {
 sed -n -E '
  s/[ \t]+$//;
  G;
  /^(\n){2,}/d;
  /^([^\n]+).*\n\1(\n|$)/d;
  h;
  P;
  ';
}

lastrepeat() {
 sed -n -E '
  s/[ \t]+$//;
  /^$/{
   H;
   d;
  };
  G;
  # delete previous repeated line if found
  s/^([^\n]+)(.*)(\n\1(\n.*|$))/\1\2\4/;
  # after searching for previous repeat, move tested last line to end
  s/^([^\n]+)(\n)(.*)/\3\2\1/;
  $!{
   h;
   d;
  };
  # squeeze blank lines to one
  s/(\n){3,}/\n\n/g;
  s/^\n//;
  p;
 ';
}
-3

This can be achieved using AWK.

The below line will display unique values:

awk file_name | uniq

You can output these unique values to a new file:

awk file_name | uniq > uniq_file_name

The new file uniq_file_name will contain only unique values, without any duplicates.

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  • 1
    I think awk is an overkill here.
    – Esmu Igors
    Jan 1, 2021 at 18:09
  • 1
    This will only remove consecutive duplicates.
    – einpoklum
    Jan 20, 2021 at 18:16
  • This isn't even using awk so much as pretending awk is cat - and even then it's a well-known misapplication - search online for: SC2002 Useless cat
    – zaTricky
    Mar 19 at 1:44
-4

Use:

cat filename | sort | uniq -c | awk -F" " '$1<2 {print $2}'

It deletes the duplicate lines using AWK.

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  • 2
    This will disturb the order of the lines.
    – Vijay
    Jun 18, 2014 at 6:58
  • 2
    What is about 20 GB text file? Too slow. Nov 1, 2017 at 10:51
  • As ever, the cat is useless. Anyway, uniq already does this by itself, and doesn't require the input to be exactly one word per line.
    – tripleee
    Oct 24, 2018 at 4:54

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