Ive seen many variations, very confused on how to solve these 3 problems.
- deleting all rows except the first from a file
- deleting a row from file with a line number
- deleting rows from a file with a range of line numbers
Using sed:
Delete 1st line:
sed '1d' file-name
Delete 10th line:
sed '10d' file-name
Delete line # 5 to 10
sed '5,10d' file-name
All above sed commands will write output on stdout that you can redirect to another file if you want or use -i
flag of sed to inline edit the file.
sed '2,$d' filename
, or sed '1!d' filename
, or sed -n '1p' filename
.
Print first line only
is same as delete all lines but the first
that's why sed -n '1p'
is also correct.
With awk:
# delete line 1
awk 'NR == 1 {next} {print}' file
# delete line number stored in shell variable $n
awk -v n=$n 'NR == n {next} {print}' file
# delete between lines $a and $b inclusive
awk -v m=$a -v n=$b 'm <= NR && NR <= n {next} {print}' file
To save a few chars, {print}
can be replaced just with 1
To overwrite the original file, you have to do something like this
awk '...' file > tmpfile && mv tmpfile file
you can just use bash if your system has it. The basic idea behind is to set a count and incrementing this count while iterating the file.
1) deleting all rows except the first from a file
read -r line < file; echo "$line" > temp && mv temp file
2) deleting a row from file with a line number
declare -i count=0
while read -r line
do
((count++))
case "$count" in
10) continue;;
* ) echo "$line";;
esac
done < file > temp && mv temp file
3) deleting rows from a file with a range of line numbers eg from 10 to 20
declare -i count=0
while read -r line
do
((count++))
if (( $c < 10 && $c > 20 ));then
echo "$line";;
fi
done < file > temp && mv temp file
read -r
will still strip leading and trailing whitespace. You need to do IFS= read -r line
. Furthermore note that from a shell script this method is faster for small files because it avoids a fork, but slower for large files because read
is inherently inefficient and usually reads one byte at a time or does one read and lseek call per invocation and string processing in bash tends to be inefficient (less so in other shells).
read
is inefficient on large files with bash
. If OP's files are large sizes and performance is an issue, then use a better tool.
Apr 22, 2011 at 13:42