Suppose I have the string 1:2:3:4:5
and I want to get its last field (5
in this case). How do I do that using Bash? I tried cut
, but I don't know how to specify the last field with -f
.
17 Answers
You can use string operators:
$ foo=1:2:3:4:5
$ echo ${foo##*:}
5
This trims everything from the front until a ':', greedily.
${foo <-- from variable foo
## <-- greedy front trim
* <-- matches anything
: <-- until the last ':'
}
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8While this is working for the given problem, the answer of William below (stackoverflow.com/a/3163857/520162) also returns
5
if the string is1:2:3:4:5:
(while using the string operators yields an empty result). This is especially handy when parsing paths that could contain (or not) a finishing/
character.– eckesCommented Jan 23, 2013 at 15:23 -
12How would you then do the opposite of this? to echo out '1:2:3:4:'?– DobzCommented Jun 25, 2014 at 11:44
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21And how does one keep the part before the last separator? Apparently by using
${foo%:*}
.#
- from beginning;%
- from end.#
,%
- shortest match;##
,%%
- longest match. Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 14:07 -
2@Putnik that command sees
pwd
as a variable. Trydir=$(pwd); echo ${dir##*/}
. Works for me! Commented Dec 17, 2017 at 4:22 -
2
Another way is to reverse before and after cut
:
$ echo ab:cd:ef | rev | cut -d: -f1 | rev
ef
This makes it very easy to get the last but one field, or any range of fields numbered from the end.
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21This answer is nice because it uses 'cut', which the author is (presumably) already familiar. Plus, I like this answer because I am using 'cut' and had this exact question, hence finding this thread via search.– DannidCommented Jan 14, 2013 at 20:50
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6Some cut-and-paste fodder for people using spaces as delimiters:
echo "1 2 3 4" | rev | cut -d " " -f1 | rev
– funrollCommented Aug 12, 2013 at 19:51 -
2the rev | cut -d -f1 | rev is so clever! Thanks! Helped me a bunch (my use case was rev | -d ' ' -f 2- | rev Commented Sep 8, 2013 at 5:01
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1I always forget about
rev
, was just what I needed!cut -b20- | rev | cut -b10- | rev
– shearn89Commented Aug 17, 2017 at 9:27 -
1I ended up with this solution, my attempt o cut file paths with "awk -F "/" '{print $NF}' " broke somewhat for me, as file names including white spaces got also cut apart– THXCommented Feb 26, 2018 at 14:34
It's difficult to get the last field using cut, but here are some solutions in awk and perl
echo 1:2:3:4:5 | awk -F: '{print $NF}'
echo 1:2:3:4:5 | perl -F: -wane 'print $F[-1]'
-
7great advantage of this solution over the accepted answer: it also matches paths that contain or do not contain a finishing
/
character:/a/b/c/d
and/a/b/c/d/
yield the same result (d
) when processingpwd | awk -F/ '{print $NF}'
. The accepted answer results in an empty result in the case of/a/b/c/d/
– eckesCommented Jan 23, 2013 at 15:20 -
@eckes In case of AWK solution, on GNU bash, version 4.3.48(1)-release that's not true, as it matters whenever you have trailing slash or not. Simply put AWK will use
/
as delimiter, and if your path is/my/path/dir/
it will use value after last delimiter, which is simply an empty string. So it's best to avoid trailing slash if you need to do such a thing like I do.– stamsterCommented May 21, 2018 at 11:52 -
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1@blackjacx There are some quirks, but something like
awk '{$NF=""; print $0}' FS=: OFS=:
often works well enough. Commented Jun 9, 2020 at 16:50
Assuming fairly simple usage (no escaping of the delimiter, for example), you can use grep:
$ echo "1:2:3:4:5" | grep -oE "[^:]+$"
5
Breakdown - find all the characters not the delimiter ([^:]) at the end of the line ($). -o only prints the matching part.
-
1-E means using extended syntax; [^...] means anything but the listed char(s); + one or more such hits (will take the maximum possible length for the pattern; this item is a gnu extension) - for the example the separating char(s) are the colon. Commented Oct 17, 2019 at 11:36
You could try something like this if you want to use cut
:
echo "1:2:3:4:5" | cut -d ":" -f5
You can also use grep
try like this :
echo " 1:2:3:4:5" | grep -o '[^:]*$'
-
1Your second command was useful to me. Would you break it down so I can understand it better? Thank you.– JohnCommented Mar 2, 2021 at 15:09
One way:
var1="1:2:3:4:5"
var2=${var1##*:}
Another, using an array:
var1="1:2:3:4:5"
saveIFS=$IFS
IFS=":"
var2=($var1)
IFS=$saveIFS
var2=${var2[@]: -1}
Yet another with an array:
var1="1:2:3:4:5"
saveIFS=$IFS
IFS=":"
var2=($var1)
IFS=$saveIFS
count=${#var2[@]}
var2=${var2[$count-1]}
Using Bash (version >= 3.2) regular expressions:
var1="1:2:3:4:5"
[[ $var1 =~ :([^:]*)$ ]]
var2=${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
$ echo "a b c d e" | tr ' ' '\n' | tail -1
e
Simply translate the delimiter into a newline and choose the last entry with tail -1
.
-
3It will fail if the last item contains a
\n
, but for most cases is the most readable solution.– YajoCommented Jul 30, 2014 at 10:13
Using sed
:
$ echo '1:2:3:4:5' | sed 's/.*://' # => 5
$ echo '' | sed 's/.*://' # => (empty)
$ echo ':' | sed 's/.*://' # => (empty)
$ echo ':b' | sed 's/.*://' # => b
$ echo '::c' | sed 's/.*://' # => c
$ echo 'a' | sed 's/.*://' # => a
$ echo 'a:' | sed 's/.*://' # => (empty)
$ echo 'a:b' | sed 's/.*://' # => b
$ echo 'a::c' | sed 's/.*://' # => c
-
given the output of many utilities is in the form of the original file name followed by colon (:) followed by the utility's output (${path}:${output}), this is incredibly useful for adding your own control character like TAB $'\t' or unit separator $'\037' etc. after that final colon. example for adding a TAB at the final colon of file output: file ~/yourPath/* | sed "s/\(.*:\)\(.*\)/\1"$'\t'"\2/"– spioterCommented Sep 3, 2020 at 13:48
There are many good answers here, but still I want to share this one using basename :
basename $(echo "a:b:c:d:e" | tr ':' '/')
However it will fail if there are already some '/' in your string. If slash / is your delimiter then you just have to (and should) use basename.
It's not the best answer but it just shows how you can be creative using bash commands.
If your last field is a single character, you could do this:
a="1:2:3:4:5"
echo ${a: -1}
echo ${a:(-1)}
Check string manipulation in bash.
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1This doesn't work: it gives the last character of
a
, not the last field. Commented Nov 13, 2013 at 16:15 -
1True, that's the idea, if you know the length of the last field it's good. If not you have to use something else...– Ab IratoCommented Nov 25, 2013 at 13:25
Using Bash.
$ var1="1:2:3:4:0"
$ IFS=":"
$ set -- $var1
$ eval echo \$${#}
0
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1Could have used
echo ${!#}
instead ofeval echo \$${#}
. Commented Apr 27, 2017 at 22:10
Regex matching in sed
is greedy (always goes to the last occurrence), which you can use to your advantage here:
$ foo=1:2:3:4:5
$ echo ${foo} | sed "s/.*://"
5
echo "a:b:c:d:e"|xargs -d : -n1|tail -1
First use xargs split it using ":",-n1 means every line only have one part.Then,pring the last part.
A solution using the read builtin:
IFS=':' read -a fields <<< "1:2:3:4:5"
echo "${fields[4]}"
Or, to make it more generic:
echo "${fields[-1]}" # prints the last item
for x in `echo $str | tr ";" "\n"`; do echo $x; done
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2This runs into problems if there is whitespace in any of the fields. Also, it does not directly address the question of retrieving the last field.– chepnerCommented Jun 22, 2012 at 12:58
improving from @mateusz-piotrowski and @user3133260 answer,
echo "a:b:c:d::e:: ::" | tr ':' ' ' | xargs | tr ' ' '\n' | tail -1
first, tr ':' ' ' -> replace ':' with whitespace
then, trim with xargs
after that, tr ' ' '\n' -> replace remained whitespace to newline
lastly, tail -1 -> get the last string
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1If you want to contribute an answer according to How to Answer please edit to make that more obvious. You can provide an answer based on an existing answer; giving credit to the exsting answers author is then very appropriate, thanks for doing that. I do however have trouble identifying the answer you are reffering to. Please use the link you get from the "Share" link beneath that answer to add an unambigous link here.– YunnoschCommented Nov 19, 2022 at 6:25
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1You know about the commenting privilege which you do not have, so well that you can even put it into words. You are aware of the rule meta.stackexchange.com/questions/214173/… . In that situation please do not decide to misuse a different mechanism (an answer) for something it is not meant for and which you are not allowed yet to do.– YunnoschCommented Nov 19, 2022 at 6:25
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As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.– Community BotCommented Nov 22, 2022 at 12:09
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Thanks for the reminder @Yunnosch, as i am not a native english speaker, i may make mistakes, for all this time using SO just seeking/reading for answers of questions and not answering questions. Commented Feb 13, 2023 at 16:15
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You only describe the code behaviour on a level which (with some experiece) is clear by the code itself. Please explain what it avhieves, i.e. wha the improvement is.– YunnoschCommented Feb 13, 2023 at 16:21
For those that comfortable with Python, https://github.com/Russell91/pythonpy is a nice choice to solve this problem.
$ echo "a:b:c:d:e" | py -x 'x.split(":")[-1]'
From the pythonpy help: -x treat each row of stdin as x
.
With that tool, it is easy to write python code that gets applied to the input.
Edit (Dec 2020): Pythonpy is no longer online. Here is an alternative:
$ echo "a:b:c:d:e" | python -c 'import sys; sys.stdout.write(sys.stdin.read().split(":")[-1])'
it contains more boilerplate code (i.e. sys.stdout.read/write
) but requires only std libraries from python.