Issue
The output of my script is tab delimited using awk
as :
awk -v variable=$bashvariable '{print variable"\t single\t" $0"\t double"}' myinfile.c
The awk
command is run in a while loop which updates the variable value and the file myinfile.c for every cycle.
I am getting the expected results with this command .
But if the inmyfile.c contains a blank line (it can contain) it prints no relevant information. can I tell awk
to ignore the blank line ?
I know it can be done by removing the blank lines from myinfile.c before passing it on to awk
.
I am in knowledge of sed
and tr
way but I want awk
to do it in the above mentioned command itself and not a separate solution as below or a piped one.
sed '/^$/d' myinfile.c
tr -s "\n" < myinfile.c
Thanks in advance for your suggestions and replies.
Solution
There are two approaches you can try to filter out lines:
awk 'NF' data.txt
and
awk 'length' data.txt
Just put these at the start of your command, i.e.,
awk -v variable=$bashvariable 'NF { print variable ... }' myinfile
or
awk -v variable=$bashvariable 'length { print variable ... }' myinfile
Both of these act as gatekeepers/if-statements.
The first approach works by only printining out lines where the number of fields (NF
) is not zero (i.e., greater than zero).
The second method looks at the line length and acts if the length is not zero (i.e., greater than zero)
You can pick the approach that is most suitable for your data/needs.
Answered By - Levon Answer Checked By - Robin (WPSolving Admin)