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I only want to extract those records which are occurring only once in the input file

Input file 1

    CHEMBL184618
    CHEMBL184618
    CHEMBL198362
    CHEMBL198362
    CHEMBL218394
    CHEMBL218394
    CHEMBL221959
    CHEMBL221959
    CHEMBL24828 
    CHEMBL24827

Expected Output

    CHEMBL24828
    CHEMBL24827

I have done sort Filename.txt | uniq -d to find the duplicated ids and save them in separate file. Then I find sort Filename.txt | uniq -c. Third step is to delete the duplicated ids from unique Ids. I want an efficient method.

4
  • Using uniq without the -c option does this. May 3, 2017 at 13:57
  • @HunterMcMillen uniq considers the duplicates. I do not want to include them at all.
    – KHAN irfan
    May 3, 2017 at 14:00
  • 1
    @HunterMcMillen -c option counts, -u will print the desired lines. May 3, 2017 at 14:00
  • oh whoops, misunderstood the question. May 3, 2017 at 14:03

3 Answers 3

5

Try with:

uniq -u input_file

From uniq manual:

-u, --unique

only print unique lines

2

Let say you have a file testFile.txt with the following inside:

CHEMBL184618
CHEMBL184618
CHEMBL198362
CHEMBL198362
CHEMBL218394
CHEMBL218394
CHEMBL221959
CHEMBL221959
CHEMBL24828 
CHEMBL24827

uniq will output all lines exactly once:

cat testFile.txt | uniq

CHEMBL184618
CHEMBL198362
CHEMBL218394
CHEMBL221959
CHEMBL24828 
CHEMBL24827

uniq -d will output all lines that appear more than once:

cat testFile.txt | uniq -d 

CHEMBL184618
CHEMBL198362
CHEMBL218394
CHEMBL221959

uniq -u will output all lines that appear exactly once:

cat testFile.txt | uniq -u

CHEMBL24828 
CHEMBL24827
1

Here is one more in awk:

 awk '{a[$0] += 1}END{ for ( i in a ) if (a[i] == 1) print i }' file

Output:

CHEMBL24828 
CHEMBL24827

I assume that removing the leading spaces is not a problem.You could do that with something like:

sed -i 's/^ *//g'

Or the awk approach that Inian posted.

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