Reputation: 1061
Question: I'd like to print a single line directly following a line that contains a matching pattern.
My version of sed
will not take the following syntax (it bombs out on +1p
) which would seem like a simple solution:
sed -n '/ABC/,+1p' infile
I assume awk
would be better to do multiline processing, but I am not sure how to do it.
Upvotes: 87
Views: 163758
Reputation: 203229
Never use the word "pattern" on it's own in this context as it is ambiguous. Always use "string" or "regexp" (or in shell "globbing pattern"), whichever it is you really mean. See How do I find the text that matches a pattern? for more about that.
The specific answer you want is:
awk 'f{print;f=0} /regexp/{f=1}' file
or specializing the more general solution of the Nth record after a regexp (idiom "c" below):
awk 'c&&!--c; /regexp/{c=1}' file
The following idioms describe how to select a range of records given a specific regexp to match:
a) Print all records from some regexp:
awk '/regexp/{f=1}f' file
b) Print all records after some regexp:
awk 'f;/regexp/{f=1}' file
c) Print the Nth record after some regexp:
awk 'c&&!--c;/regexp/{c=N}' file
d) Print every record except the Nth record after some regexp:
awk 'c&&!--c{next}/regexp/{c=N}1' file
e) Print the N records after some regexp:
awk 'c&&c--;/regexp/{c=N}' file
f) Print every record except the N records after some regexp:
awk 'c&&c--{next}/regexp/{c=N}1' file
g) Print the N records from some regexp:
awk '/regexp/{c=N}c&&c--' file
I changed the variable name from "f" for "found" to "c" for "count" where appropriate as that's more expressive of what the variable actually IS.
f
is short for found
. Its a boolean flag that I'm setting to 1 (true) when I find a string matching the regular expression regexp in the input (/regexp/{f=1}
). The other place you see f
on its own in each script it's being tested as a condition and when true causes awk to execute its default action of printing the current record. So input records only get output after we see regexp and set f
to 1/true.
c && c-- { foo }
means "if c
is non-zero then decrement it and if it's still non-zero then execute foo
" so if c
starts at 3 then it'll be decremented to 2 and then foo
executed, and on the next input line c
is now 2 so it'll be decremented to 1 and then foo
executed again, and on the next input line c
is now 1 so it'll be decremented to 0 but this time foo
will not be executed because 0 is a false condition. We do c && c--
instead of just testing for c-- > 0
so we can't run into a case with a huge input file where c
hits zero and continues getting decremented so often it wraps around and becomes positive again.
Upvotes: 190
Reputation: 9256
It's the line after that match that you're interesting in, right? In sed, that could be accomplished like so:
sed -n '/ABC/{n;p}' infile
Alternatively, grep's A option might be what you're looking for.
-A NUM, Print NUM lines of trailing context after matching lines.
For example, given the following input file:
foo
bar
baz
bash
bongo
You could use the following:
$ grep -A 1 "bar" file
bar
baz
$ sed -n '/bar/{n;p}' file
baz
Upvotes: 59
Reputation: 136
If you just want the next line after a pattern, this sed
command will work
sed -n -e '/pattern/{n;p;}'
-n
supresses output (quiet mode);
-e
denotes a sed command (not required in this case);
/pattern/
is a regex search for lines containing the literal combination of the characters pattern
(Use /^pattern$/
for line consisting of only of “pattern”;
n
replaces the pattern space with the next line;
p
prints;
For example:
seq 10 | sed -n -e '/5/{n;p;}'
Note that the above command will print a single line after every line containing pattern
. If you just want the first one use sed -n -e '/pattern/{n;p;q;}'
. This is also more efficient as the whole file is not read.
This strictly sed
command will print all lines after your pattern.
sed -n '/pattern/,${/pattern/!p;}
Formatted as a sed
script this would be:
/pattern/,${
/pattern/!p
}
Here’s a short example:
seq 10 | sed -n '/5/,${/5/!p;}'
/pattern/,$
will select all the lines from pattern
to the end of the file.
{}
groups the next set of commands (c-like block command)
/pattern/!p;
prints lines that doesn’t match pattern
. Note that the ;
is required in early versions, and some non-GNU, of sed
. This turns the instruction into a exclusive range - sed
ranges are normally inclusive for both start and end of the range.
To exclude the end of range you could do something like this:
sed -n '/pattern/,/endpattern/{/pattern/!{/endpattern/d;p;}}
/pattern/,/endpattern/{
/pattern/!{
/endpattern/d
p
}
}
/endpattern/d
is deleted from the “pattern space” and the script restarts from the top, skipping the p
command for that line.
Another pithy example:
seq 10 | sed -n '/5/,/8/{/5/!{/8/d;p}}'
If you have GNU sed you can add the debug switch:
seq 5 | sed -n --debug '/2/,/4/{/2/!{/4/d;p}}'
Output:
SED PROGRAM:
/2/,/4/ {
/2/! {
/4/ d
p
}
}
INPUT: 'STDIN' line 1
PATTERN: 1
COMMAND: /2/,/4/ {
COMMAND: }
END-OF-CYCLE:
INPUT: 'STDIN' line 2
PATTERN: 2
COMMAND: /2/,/4/ {
COMMAND: /2/! {
COMMAND: }
COMMAND: }
END-OF-CYCLE:
INPUT: 'STDIN' line 3
PATTERN: 3
COMMAND: /2/,/4/ {
COMMAND: /2/! {
COMMAND: /4/ d
COMMAND: p
3
COMMAND: }
COMMAND: }
END-OF-CYCLE:
INPUT: 'STDIN' line 4
PATTERN: 4
COMMAND: /2/,/4/ {
COMMAND: /2/! {
COMMAND: /4/ d
END-OF-CYCLE:
INPUT: 'STDIN' line 5
PATTERN: 5
COMMAND: /2/,/4/ {
COMMAND: }
END-OF-CYCLE:
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4455
I needed to print ALL lines after the pattern ( ok Ed, REGEX ), so I settled on this one:
sed -n '/pattern/,$p' # prints all lines after ( and including ) the pattern
But since I wanted to print all the lines AFTER ( and exclude the pattern )
sed -n '/pattern/,$p' | tail -n+2 # all lines after first occurrence of pattern
I suppose in your case you can add a head -1
at the end
sed -n '/pattern/,$p' | tail -n+2 | head -1 # prints line after pattern
And I really should include tlwhitec's comment in this answer (since their sed-strict approach is the more elegant than my suggestions):
sed '0,/pattern/d'
The above script deletes every line starting with the first and stopping with (and including) the line that matches the pattern. All lines after that are printed.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 1420
Piping some greps can do it (it runs in POSIX shell and under BusyBox):
cat my-file | grep -A1 my-regexp | grep -v -- '--' | grep -v my-regexp
-v
will show non-matching linesUpvotes: 0
Reputation: 58371
This might work for you (GNU sed):
sed -n ':a;/regexp/{n;h;p;x;ba}' file
Use seds grep-like option -n
and if the current line contains the required regexp replace the current line with the next, copy that line to the hold space (HS), print the line, swap the pattern space (PS) for the HS and repeat.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1270
Actually sed -n '/pattern/{n;p}' filename
will fail if the pattern
match continuous
lines:
$ seq 15 |sed -n '/1/{n;p}'
2
11
13
15
The expected answers should be:
2
11
12
13
14
15
My solution is:
$ sed -n -r 'x;/_/{x;p;x};x;/pattern/!s/.*//;/pattern/s/.*/_/;h' filename
For example:
$ seq 15 |sed -n -r 'x;/_/{x;p;x};x;/1/!s/.*//;/1/s/.*/_/;h'
2
11
12
13
14
15
Explains:
x;
: at the beginning of each line from input, use x
command to exchange the contents in pattern space
& hold space
./_/{x;p;x};
: if pattern space
, which is the hold space
actually, contains _
(this is just a indicator
indicating if last line matched the pattern
or not), then use x
to exchange the actual content of current line
to pattern space
, use p
to print current line
, and x
to recover this operation. x
: recover the contents in pattern space
and hold space
./pattern/!s/.*//
: if current line
does NOT match pattern
, which means we should NOT print the NEXT following line, then use s/.*//
command to delete all contents in pattern space
./pattern/s/.*/_/
: if current line
matches pattern
, which means we should print the NEXT following line, then we need to set a indicator
to tell sed
to print NEXT line, so use s/.*/_/
to substitute all contents in pattern space
to a _
(the second command will use it to judge if last line matched the pattern
or not).h
: overwrite the hold space
with the contents in pattern space
; then, the content in hold space
is ^_$
which means current line
matches the pattern
, or ^$
, which means current line
does NOT match the pattern
.s/.*/_/
, the pattern space
can NOT match /pattern/
, so the s/.*//
MUST be executed!Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1871
If pattern match, copy next line into the pattern buffer, delete a return, then quit -- side effect is to print.
sed '/pattern/ { N; s/.*\n//; q }; d'
Upvotes: 1