I've always contended that you should never use a range expression like:
/start/,/end/
in awk because although it makes the trivial case where you only want to print matching text including the start and end lines slightly briefer than the alternative*:
/start/{f=1} f{print; if (/end/) f=0}
when you want to tweak it even slightly to do anything else, it requires a complete re-write or results in duplicated or otherwise undesirable code. e.g. if you want to print the matching text excluding the range delimiters using the second form above you'd just tweak it to move the components around:
f{if (/end/) f=0; else print} /start/{f=1}
but if you started with /start/,/end/
you'd need to abandon that approach in favor of what I just posted or you'd have to write something like:
/start/,/end/{ if (!/start|end/) print }
i.e. duplicate the conditions which is undesirable.
Then I saw a question posted that required identifying the LAST end
in a file and where a range expression was used in the solution and I thought it seemed like that might have some value (see https://stackoverflow.com/a/21145009/1745001).
Now, though, I'm back to thinking that it's just not worth bothering with range expressions at all and a solution that doesn't use range expressions would have worked just as well for that case.
So - does anyone have an example where a range expression actually adds noticeable value to a solution?
*I used to use:
/start/{f=1} f; /end/{f=0}
but too many times I found I had to do something additional when f
is true and /end/
is found (or to put it another way ONLY do something when /end/
is found IF f
were true) so now I just try to stick to the slightly less brief but much more robust and extensible:
/start/{f=1} f{print; if (/end/) f=0}
f
you're cutting down on (one kind of) repetition but in doing so you're taking on the responsibility of keeping track off
between records. This effectively means that in order to understand the script, you have to read it (at least) twice, rather than once.if
in the action block or something else? My concern with the range expression is just there's IMHO no reasonable way to build upon it if/when your requirements change.if
. It's a simple combination of two regexes and neither approach scales particularly well with multiple conditions anyway. I guess you could do/start/ {getline; do { print; getline } while (!/end/)}
if you really wanted ;)if
is that you're duplicating code so if you had to test for a different condition later then you'd need to make the same change in 2 places which is generally undesirable in software. wrt thegetline
suggestion - that is fraught with issues and should not be implemented, make sure you read and fully understand awk.info/?tip/getline if you're considering usinggetline
.getline
but thanks for the link anyway :) In terms of avoiding repetition, you could always set the patterns to variables and use the~
operator:$0~s, $0~e {if(!($0~s||$0~e)) print}
file`. Anyway, all of the approaches are hacky in my opinion, so to each his own.