Next: Nonconstant Fields, Previous: Records, Up: Reading Files [Contents][Index]
When awk
reads an input record, the record is
automatically parsed or separated by the awk
utility into chunks
called fields. By default, fields are separated by whitespace,
like words in a line.
Whitespace in awk
means any string of one or more spaces,
TABs, or newlines; other characters
that are considered whitespace by other languages
(such as formfeed, vertical tab, etc.) are not considered
whitespace by awk
.
The purpose of fields is to make it more convenient for you to refer to
these pieces of the record. You don’t have to use them—you can
operate on the whole record if you want—but fields are what make
simple awk
programs so powerful.
You use a dollar sign (‘$’)
to refer to a field in an awk
program,
followed by the number of the field you want. Thus, $1
refers to the first field, $2
to the second, and so on.
(Unlike in the Unix shells, the field numbers are not limited to single digits.
$127
is the 127th field in the record.)
For example, suppose the following is a line of input:
This seems like a pretty nice example.
Here the first field, or $1
, is ‘This’, the second field, or
$2
, is ‘seems’, and so on. Note that the last field,
$7
, is ‘example.’. Because there is no space between the
‘e’ and the ‘.’, the period is considered part of the seventh
field.
NF
is a predefined variable whose value is the number of fields
in the current record. awk
automatically updates the value
of NF
each time it reads a record. No matter how many fields
there are, the last field in a record can be represented by $NF
.
So, $NF
is the same as $7
, which is ‘example.’.
If you try to reference a field beyond the last
one (such as $8
when the record has only seven fields), you get
the empty string. (If used in a numeric operation, you get zero.)
The use of $0
, which looks like a reference to the “zeroth” field, is
a special case: it represents the whole input record. Use it
when you are not interested in specific fields.
Here are some more examples:
$ awk '$1 ~ /li/ { print $0 }' mail-list -| Amelia 555-5553 amelia.zodiacusque@gmail.com F -| Julie 555-6699 julie.perscrutabor@skeeve.com F
This example prints each record in the file mail-list whose first field contains the string ‘li’.
By contrast, the following example looks for ‘li’ in the entire record and prints the first and last fields for each matching input record:
$ awk '/li/ { print $1, $NF }' mail-list -| Amelia F -| Broderick R -| Julie F -| Samuel A
Next: Nonconstant Fields, Previous: Records, Up: Reading Files [Contents][Index]