I am on GNU bash, version 4.3.11.
Say I want to print unique lines on a file. I am using this approach, which works well on a file:
$ cat a
9
10
9
11
$ awk '!seen[$0]++' a
9
10
11
However, if I get the input from stdin, using double quotes in a multi-line and piping to awk, it fails:
$ echo "9
> 10
> 9
> 11" | awk '!seen[$0]++'
bash: !seen[$0]++': event not found
That is, bash tries to expand the command seen
, which of course does not know because it is a variable name. But it shouldn't happen, since the command is placed within single-quotes.
echo
ing in a single-quoted, multi-line input works well:
$ echo '9
> 10
> 9
> 11' | awk '!seen[$0]++'
9
10
11
The funny thing is that it also works well on a single-line input that is double-quoted:
$ printf "9\n10\n9\n11" | awk '!seen[$0]++'
9
10
11
I wonder why is Bash trying to expand history if it occurs after a mutiline input, even though the command itself uses single-quotes.
Other considerations:
Having a pipe in between does not fix it, either:
$ echo "9
> 10
> 9
> 11" | cat - | awk '!seen[$0]++'
bash: !seen[$0]++': event not found
And setting set +H
turns history off, so it works well because it does not try to expand anything:
$ set +H
$ echo "9
> 10
> 9
> 11" | awk '!seen[$0]++'
9
10
11
I went through the canonical answer by rici on how to address error “bash: !d': event not found” in Bash command substitution and found many possible reasons, but none matches this behaviour.
!
is processed as though it is in double quotes. You will also notice that you will get a>
on the next line as it waits for you to close this perceived quoted string. This is why it works on a single line as well. Looks like a bug.3.2.51
$ ls<press enter here>
$ echo "<press enter here>asdasd<another enter here>" | echo '!!'
will print weird outputs...!#
, not what you would expect, tryecho "<ENTER>123<ENTER>" | awk '!#'
. It returns" | awk '" | awk ''