If I want to pass a parameter to an awk script file, how can I do that ?
#!/usr/bin/awk -f
{print $1}
Here I want to print the first argument
In awk
$1
references the first field in a record not the first argument like it does in bash
. You need to use ARGV
for this, check out here for the offical word.
Script:
#!/bin/awk -f
BEGIN{
print "AWK Script"
print ARGV[1]
}
Demo:
$ ./script.awk "Passed in using ARGV"
AWK Script
Passed in using ARGV
your hash bang defines the script is not shell script, it is an awk script. you cannot do it in bash way within your script.
also, what you did : echo blah|awk ...
is not passing paramenter, it pipes the output of echo command to another command.
you could try these way below:
echo "hello"|./foo.awk file -
or
var="hello"
awk -v a="$var" -f foo.awk file
with this, you have var a
in your foo.awk, you could use it.
if you want to do something like shell script accept $1 $2 vars, you can write a small shellscript to wrap your awk stuff.
EDIT
No I didn't misunderstand you.
let's take the example:
let's say, your x.awk
has:
{print $1}
if you do :
echo "foo" | x.awk file
it is same as:
echo "foo"| awk '{print $1}' file
here the input for awk is only file
, your echo foo doesn't make sense. if you do:
echo "foo"|awk '{print $1}' file -
or
echo "foo"|awk '{print $1}' - file
awk takes two input (arguments for awk) one is stdin one is the file, in your awk script you could:
echo "foo"|awk 'NR==FNR{print $1;next}{print $1}' - file
this will print first foo
from your echo, then the column1 from file
of course this example does nothing actual work, just print them all.
you can of course have more than two inputs, and don't check the NR and FNR, you could use the
ARGC The number of elements in the ARGV array.
ARGV An array of command line arguments, excluding options and the program argument, numbered from zero to ARGC-1
for example :
echo "foo"|./x.awk file1 - file2
then your "foo" is the 2nd arg, you can get it in your x.awk by ARGV[2]
echo "foo" |x.awk file1 file2 file2 -
now it is ARGV[4] case.
I mean, your echo "foo"|..
would be stdin for awk, it could by 1st or nth "argument"/input for awk. depends on where you put the -
(stdin). You have to handle it in your awk script.
You can use -v
as a command-line option to provide a variable to the script:
Say we have a file script.awk like this:
BEGIN {print "I got the var:", my_var}
Then we run it like this:
$ awk -v my_var="hello this is me" -f script.awk
I got the var: hello this is me