Reputation: 1891
I'm learning awk from The AWK Programming Language and I have a problem with one of the examples.
If I wanted to print $3 if $2 is equal to a value (e.g.1
), I was using this command which works fine:
awk '$2==1 {print $3}' <infile> | more
But when I substitute 1 by another searching criteria, (e.g.findtext
), the command doesn't work:
awk '$1== findtext {print $3}' <infile> | more
It returns no output and I'm sure that 'findtext' exist on the input file.
I also tried this, but it does not work:
awk '$1== "findtext" {print $3}' <infile> | more
Here's my test file named 'test' and it has 9 lines and 8 fields, separated by space:
1 11 0.959660297 0 0.021231423 -0.0073 -0.0031 MhZisp
2 14 0.180467091 0.800424628 0 0.0566 0.0103 ClNonZ
3 19 0.98089172 0 0 -0.0158 0.0124 MhNonZ
4 15 0.704883227 0.265392781 0.010615711 -0.0087 -0.0092 MhZisp
5 22 0.010615711 0.959660297 0.010615711 0.0476 0.0061 ClNonZ
6 23 0.715498938 0 0.265392781 -0.0013 -0.0309 Unkn
7 26 0.927813163 0 0.053078556 -0.0051 -0.0636 MhZisp
8 44 0.55626327 0.222929936 0.201698514 0.0053 -0.0438 MhZisp
9 31 0.492569002 0.350318471 0.138004246 0.0485 0.0088 ClNonZ
Here's what I did and the output:
$awk '$8 == "ClNonZ" {print $3}' test
$ grep ClNonZ test
2 14 0.180467091 0.800424628 0 0.0566 0.0103 ClNonZ
5 22 0.010615711 0.959660297 0.010615711 0.0476 0.0061 ClNonZ
9 31 0.492569002 0.350318471 0.138004246 0.0485 0.0088 ClNonZ
I expect to see this which is the $3 that has "ClNonZ" in their $8.
0.180467091
0.010615711
0.492569002
Don't know why the awk command didn't return anything. Any thoughts?
Upvotes: 137
Views: 387000
Reputation: 3170
This is more readable for me
awk '{if ($2 ~ /findtext/) print $3}' <infile>
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 6107
Depending on the AWK
implementation are you using ==
is ok or not.
Have you tried ~
?. For example, if you want $1 to be "hello":
awk '$1 ~ /^hello$/{ print $3; }' <infile>
^
means $1 start, and $
is $1 end.
Upvotes: 27
Reputation: 48
please try this
echo $VAR | grep ClNonZ | awk '{print $3}';
or
echo cat filename | grep ClNonZ | awk '{print $3}';
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 947
This method uses regexp, it should work:
awk '$2 ~ /findtext/ {print $3}' <infile>
Upvotes: 43
Reputation: 1891
My awk version is 3.1.5.
Yes, the input file is space separated, no tabs.
According to arutaku's answer, here's what I tried that worked:
awk '$8 ~ "ClNonZ"{ print $3; }' test
0.180467091
0.010615711
0.492569002
$ awk '$8 ~ "ClNonZ" { print $3}' test
0.180467091
0.010615711
0.492569002
What didn't work(I don't know why and maybe due to my awk version:),
$awk '$8 ~ "^ClNonZ$"{ print $3; }' test
$awk '$8 == "ClNonZ" { print $3 }' test
Thank you all for your answers, comments and help!
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 15802
If you're looking for a particular string, put quotes around it:
awk '$1 == "findtext" {print $3}'
Otherwise, awk will assume it's a variable name.
Upvotes: 166