Updated To Locate USA
Not 1st Line As Provided in Your Question
Using awk
you can do what you are attempting in a very simple manner, e.g.
$ awk -F'|' '/USA/ {for (i = NF; i >= 1; i--) printf "%s%s", $i, i==1 ? RS : FS}' cars.txt
USA|Ford|Michael
India|Maruti|Rahul
Explanation
awk -F'|'
read the file using '|'
as the Field-Separator, specified as -F'|'
at the beginning of the call, or as FS
within the command itself,
/USA/
locate only lines containing "USA"
,
for (i = NF; i >= 1; i--)
- loop over fields in reverse order,
printf "%s%s", $i, i==1 ? RS : FS
- output the field followed by a '|'
(FS
) if i
is not equal 1
or by the Record-Separator (RS
) which is a "\n"
by default if i
is equal 1
. The form test ? true_val : false_val
is just the ternary operator that tests if i == 1
and if so provides RS
for output, otherwise provides FS
for output.
It will be orders of magnitude faster than spawning 8-subshells using command substitutions, grep
and cut
(plus the pipes).
Printing Only The 1st Occurrence of Line Containing "USA"
To print only the first line with "USA"
, all you need to do is exit
after processing, e.g.
$ awk -F'|' '/USA/ {for (i = NF; i >= 1; i--) printf "%s%s", $i, i==1 ? RS : FS; exit}' cars.txt
USA|Ford|Michael
Explanation
- simply adding
exit
to the end of the command will cause awk
to stop processing records after the first one.
While both awk
and sed
take a little time to make friends with, together they provide the Unix-Swiss-Army-Knife for text processing. Well worth the time to learn both. It only takes a couple of hours to get a good base by going through one of the tutorials. Good luck with your scripting.