awk script
Jonathan I. Kamens
jik at athena.mit.edu
Wed Mar 20 10:44:22 AEST 1991
In article <1991Mar19.171332.28055 at colorado.edu>, lewis at tramp.Colorado.EDU (LEWIS WILLIAM M JR) writes:
|> WRONG! WRONG! WRONG! See page 10 of the nawk book or Section 2.2 (page 3) of
|> the original Aho, Kernighan and Weinberger paper. The default action is
|> to print $0.
I am quite aware of the default action. But that wasn't what I was
referring to. You should read a little bit more carefully before you tell
someone that he is "WRONG! WRONG! WRONG!"
The poster to which I was responding had this awk code:
awk '{ $1 == ${ME} && $8 != "grep" $2 }' `
Now, as I said in my last posting in this thread, that is not valid because he
has simply specified a field and expected awk to print it. This is different
from the "default action" of printing $0, because the default action only
takes place when there is no '{ ... }' for awk to evaluate.
Don't believe me? Well, this (trivial example) doesn't work for me:
ls -l | awk '{$2}'
and this does:
ls -l | awk '{print $2}'
--
Jonathan Kamens USnail:
MIT Project Athena 11 Ashford Terrace
jik at Athena.MIT.EDU Allston, MA 02134
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