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awk
programs are often used as components in larger
programs written in shell.
For example, it is very common to use a shell variable to
hold a pattern that the awk
program searches for.
There are two ways to get the value of the shell variable
into the body of the awk
program.
A common method is to use shell quoting to substitute the variable’s value into the program inside the script. For example, consider the following program:
printf "Enter search pattern: " read pattern awk "/$pattern/ "'{ nmatches++ } END { print nmatches, "found" }' /path/to/data
The awk
program consists of two pieces of quoted text
that are concatenated together to form the program.
The first part is double-quoted, which allows substitution of
the pattern
shell variable inside the quotes.
The second part is single-quoted.
Variable substitution via quoting works, but can potentially be messy. It requires a good understanding of the shell’s quoting rules (see section Shell Quoting Issues), and it’s often difficult to correctly match up the quotes when reading the program.
A better method is to use awk
’s variable assignment feature
(see section Assigning Variables on the Command Line)
to assign the shell variable’s value to an awk
variable.
Then use dynamic regexps to match the pattern
(see section Using Dynamic Regexps).
The following shows how to redo the
previous example using this technique:
printf "Enter search pattern: " read pattern awk -v pat="$pattern" '$0 ~ pat { nmatches++ } END { print nmatches, "found" }' /path/to/data
Now, the awk
program is just one single-quoted string.
The assignment ‘-v pat="$pattern"’ still requires double quotes,
in case there is whitespace in the value of $pattern
.
The awk
variable pat
could be named pattern
too, but that would be more confusing. Using a variable also
provides more flexibility, as the variable can be used anywhere inside
the program—for printing, as an array subscript, or for any other
use—without requiring the quoting tricks at every point in the program.
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