An example of fixed-width data would be the input for old Fortran programs where numbers are run together, or the output of programs that did not anticipate the use of their output as input for other programs.
An example of the latter is a table where all the columns are lined up
by the use of a variable number of spaces and empty fields are
just spaces. Clearly, awk
’s normal field splitting based
on FS
does not work well in this case. Although a portable
awk
program can use a series of substr()
calls on
$0
(see String-Manipulation Functions), this is awkward and inefficient
for a large number of fields.
The splitting of an input record into fixed-width fields is specified by
assigning a string containing space-separated numbers to the built-in
variable FIELDWIDTHS
. Each number specifies the width of the
field, including columns between fields. If you want to ignore
the columns between fields, you can specify the width as a separate
field that is subsequently ignored. It is a fatal error to supply a
field width that has a negative value.
The following data is the output of the Unix w
utility. It is useful
to illustrate the use of FIELDWIDTHS
:
10:06pm up 21 days, 14:04, 23 users User tty login idle JCPU PCPU what hzuo ttyV0 8:58pm 9 5 vi p24.tex hzang ttyV3 6:37pm 50 -csh eklye ttyV5 9:53pm 7 1 em thes.tex dportein ttyV6 8:17pm 1:47 -csh gierd ttyD3 10:00pm 1 elm dave ttyD4 9:47pm 4 4 w brent ttyp0 26Jun91 4:46 26:46 4:41 bash dave ttyq4 26Jun9115days 46 46 wnewmail
The following program takes this input, converts the idle time to number of seconds, and prints out the first two fields and the calculated idle time:
BEGIN { FIELDWIDTHS = "9 6 10 6 7 7 35" } NR > 2 { idle = $4 sub(/^ +/, "", idle) # strip leading spaces if (idle == "") idle = 0 if (idle ~ /:/) { # hh:mm split(idle, t, ":") idle = t[1] * 60 + t[2] } if (idle ~ /days/) idle *= 24 * 60 * 60 print $1, $2, idle }
NOTE: The preceding program uses a number of
awk
features that haven’t been introduced yet.
Running the program on the data produces the following results:
hzuo ttyV0 0 hzang ttyV3 50 eklye ttyV5 0 dportein ttyV6 107 gierd ttyD3 1 dave ttyD4 0 brent ttyp0 286 dave ttyq4 1296000
Another (possibly more practical) example of fixed-width input data
is the input from a deck of balloting cards. In some parts of
the United States, voters mark their choices by punching holes in computer
cards. These cards are then processed to count the votes for any particular
candidate or on any particular issue. Because a voter may choose not to
vote on some issue, any column on the card may be empty. An awk
program for processing such data could use the FIELDWIDTHS
feature
to simplify reading the data. (Of course, getting gawk
to run on
a system with card readers is another story!)