I want the variable sum/NR to be printed side-by-side in each iteration. How do we avoid awk from printing newline in each iteration ? In my code a newline is printed by default in each iteration
for file in cg_c ep_c is_c tau xhpl
printf "\n $file" >> to-plot.xls
for f in 2.54 1.60 800
awk '{sum+=$3}; END {print sum/NR}' ${file}_${f}_v1.xls >> to-plot-p.xls
done
done
I want the output to appear like this
cg_c ans1 ans2 ans3
ep_c ans1 ans2 ans3
is_c ans1 ans2 ans3
tau ans1 ans2 ans3
xhpl ans1 ans2 ans3
my current out put is like this
**cg_c**
ans1
ans2
ans3
**ep_c**
ans1
ans2
ans3
**is_c**
ans1
ans2
ans3
**tau**
ans1
ans2
ans3
**xhpl**
ans1
ans2
ans3
awk '{sum+=$3}; END {printf "%f",sum/NR}' ${file}_${f}_v1.xls >> to-plot-p.xls
print
will insert a newline by default. You dont want that to happen, hence use printf
instead.
The ORS (output record separator) variable in AWK defaults to "\n" and is printed after every line. You can change it to " " in the BEGIN
section if you want everything printed consecutively.
I guess many people are entering in this question looking for a way to avoid the new line in awk
. Thus, I am going to offer a solution to just that, since the answer to the specific context was already solved!
In awk
, print
automatically inserts a ORS
after printing. ORS
stands for "output record separator" and defaults to the new line. So whenever you say print "hi"
awk prints "hi" + new line.
This can be changed in two different ways: using an empty ORS
or using printf
.
Using an empty ORS
awk -v ORS= '1' <<< "hello
man"
This returns "helloman", all together.
The problem here is that not all awks accept setting an empty ORS
, so you probably have to set another record separator.
awk -v ORS="-" '{print ...}' file
For example:
awk -v ORS="-" '1' <<< "hello
man"
Returns "hello-man-".
Using printf
(preferable)
While print
attaches ORS
after the record, printf
does not. Thus, printf "hello"
just prints "hello", nothing else.
$ awk 'BEGIN{print "hello"; print "bye"}'
hello
bye
$ awk 'BEGIN{printf "hello"; printf "bye"}'
hellobye
Finally, note that in general this misses a final new line, so that the shell prompt will be in the same line as the last line of the output. To clean this, use END {print ""}
so a new line will be printed after all the processing.
$ seq 5 | awk '{printf "%s", $0}'
12345$
# ^ prompt here
$ seq 5 | awk '{printf "%s", $0} END {print ""}'
12345
one way
awk '/^\*\*/{gsub("*","");printf "\n"$0" ";next}{printf $0" "}' to-plot.xls
If Perl is an option, here is a solution using fedorqui's example:
seq 5 | perl -ne 'chomp; print "$_ "; END{print "\n"}'
Explanation:
chomp
removes the newline
print "$_ "
prints each line, appending a space
the END{}
block is used to print a newline
output: 1 2 3 4 5