String Functions

The built-in string functions are much more significant and interesting than the numeric functions. Because awk is essentially designed as a string-processing language, a lot of its power derives from these functions. Table 9.2 lists the string functions found in awk.

Table 9.2. Awk’s Built-In String Functions
Awk FunctionDescription
gsub(r,s,t)

Globally substitutes s for each match of the regular expression r in the string t. Returns the number of substitutions. If t is not supplied, defaults to $0.

index(s,t)

Returns position of substring t in string s or zero if not present.

length(s)

Returns length of string s or length of $0 if no string is supplied.

match(s,r)

Returns either the position in s where the regular expression r begins, or 0 if no occurrences are found. Sets the values of RSTART and RLENGTH.

split(s,a,sep)

Parses string s into elements of array a using field separator sep; returns number of elements. If sep is not supplied, FS is used. Array splitting works the same way as field splitting.

sprintf(”fmt“,expr)

Uses printf format specification for expr.

sub(r,s,t)

Substitutes s for first match of the regular expression r in the string t. Returns 1 if successful; 0 otherwise. If t is not supplied, defaults to $0.

substr(s,p,n)

Returns substring of string s at beginning position p up to a maximum length of n. If n is not supplied, the rest of the string from p is used.

tolower(s)

Translates all uppercase characters in string s to lowercase and returns the new ...

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