You could use a shell feature that is called Process substitution whereby the output of a process is used as an argument to a shell script or a shell function.
Vinicius Placco in the comments has shown how this could work in your case
levenshtein <(awk '{$1=""; print}' text1) <(awk '{$1=""; print}' text2)
Note that this works only on systems that have Named Pipes or a similar mechnanism, that includes all Linux systems.
Some details
This mechanism works as follows. A special file is created by the system that accumulates the output of a command command
inside the <( command )
argument. The name of this file is given as a positional argument to levenshtein
script.
Another post suggested using Command substitution $( command )
where the entire output of the command command
is used to build the argument list for levenshtein
.
For instance if the file text1.txt
contains the lines
1 love
2 love
3 love
...
then levenshtein <( awk '{print $1} text1' )
would create a special file /dev/fd/nn
and call `
levenshtein /dev/fd/nn
The contents of the file would be the output of awk '{print $1}' text1
.
With command substitution levenshtein $( awk '{print $1}' text1)
would split the output into individual tokens separated with whitespace and execute
levenshtein love love love
awk '{print $2}' text1 text2
instead of any variant otawk '{$1=""; print}' text1 awk '{$1=""; print}' text2
. If you edit your question to include concise, testable sample input and expected output we could help you more.