Book Image

Learning AWK Programming

By : Shiwang Kalkhanda
5 (1)
Book Image

Learning AWK Programming

5 (1)
By: Shiwang Kalkhanda

Overview of this book

AWK is one of the most primitive and powerful utilities which exists in all Unix and Unix-like distributions. It is used as a command-line utility when performing a basic text-processing operation, and as programming language when dealing with complex text-processing and mining tasks. With this book, you will have the required expertise to practice advanced AWK programming in real-life examples. The book starts off with an introduction to AWK essentials. You will then be introduced to regular expressions, AWK variables and constants, arrays and AWK functions and more. The book then delves deeper into more complex tasks, such as printing formatted output in AWK, control flow statements, GNU's implementation of AWK covering the advanced features of GNU AWK, such as network communication, debugging, and inter-process communication in the GAWK programming language which is not easily possible with AWK. By the end of this book, the reader will have worked on the practical implementation of text processing and pattern matching using AWK to perform routine tasks.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Assignment expressions

An assignment is an expression that stores a value in a variable. The simplest assignment operator is =, the equals sign. It stores the value of the right-hand-side operand as such. The assignment statement syntax is as follows:

<variable> or <field> or <array> = <constant> or <expression> or

The basic variable assignment is represented by the equals sign, =. Whatever value was assigned earlier is forgotten and the new value is assigned. For example, we assign a value to variable x=10 as follows:

$ awk 'BEGIN{ x=10; print "Number x is : ", x}'

The output on execution of the preceding code is as follows:

Number x is :  10

Assignment can store string values as well. For example, now we declare a variable message and store the string Welcome to Awk Programming. To store this string, we use two more variables...