Node:Expression Patterns, Next:Ranges, Previous:Regexp Patterns, Up:Pattern Overview
Any awk
expression is valid as an awk
pattern.
The pattern matches if the expression's value is nonzero (if a
number) or non-null (if a string).
The expression is reevaluated each time the rule is tested against a new
input record. If the expression uses fields such as $1
, the
value depends directly on the new input record's text; otherwise, it
depends on only what has happened so far in the execution of the
awk
program.
Comparison expressions, using the comparison operators described in
Variable Typing and Comparison Expressions,
are a very common kind of pattern.
Regexp matching and nonmatching are also very common expressions.
The left operand of the ~
and !~
operators is a string.
The right operand is either a constant regular expression enclosed in
slashes (/regexp/
), or any expression whose string value
is used as a dynamic regular expression
(see Using Dynamic Regexps).
The following example prints the second field of each input record
whose first field is precisely foo
:
$ awk '$1 == "foo" { print $2 }' BBS-list
(There is no output, because there is no BBS site with the exact name foo
.)
Contrast this with the following regular expression match, which
accepts any record with a first field that contains foo
:
$ awk '$1 ~ /foo/ { print $2 }' BBS-list -| 555-1234 -| 555-6699 -| 555-6480 -| 555-2127
A regexp constant as a pattern is also a special case of an expression
pattern. The expression /foo/
has the value one if foo
appears in the current input record. Thus, as a pattern, /foo/
matches any record containing foo
.
Boolean expressions are also commonly used as patterns.
Whether the pattern
matches an input record depends on whether its subexpressions match.
For example, the following command prints all the records in
BBS-list
that contain both 2400
and foo
:
$ awk '/2400/ && /foo/' BBS-list -| fooey 555-1234 2400/1200/300 B
The following command prints all records in
BBS-list
that contain either 2400
or foo
(or both, of course):
$ awk '/2400/ || /foo/' BBS-list -| alpo-net 555-3412 2400/1200/300 A -| bites 555-1675 2400/1200/300 A -| fooey 555-1234 2400/1200/300 B -| foot 555-6699 1200/300 B -| macfoo 555-6480 1200/300 A -| sdace 555-3430 2400/1200/300 A -| sabafoo 555-2127 1200/300 C
The following command prints all records in
BBS-list
that do not contain the string foo
:
$ awk '! /foo/' BBS-list -| aardvark 555-5553 1200/300 B -| alpo-net 555-3412 2400/1200/300 A -| barfly 555-7685 1200/300 A -| bites 555-1675 2400/1200/300 A -| camelot 555-0542 300 C -| core 555-2912 1200/300 C -| sdace 555-3430 2400/1200/300 A
The subexpressions of a Boolean operator in a pattern can be constant regular
expressions, comparisons, or any other awk
expressions. Range
patterns are not expressions, so they cannot appear inside Boolean
patterns. Likewise, the special patterns BEGIN
and END
,
which never match any input record, are not expressions and cannot
appear inside Boolean patterns.