Patterns in awk
control the execution of rules—a rule is
executed when its pattern matches the current input record.
The following is a summary of the types of awk
patterns:
/regular expression/
A regular expression. It matches when the text of the input record fits the regular expression. (See Regular Expressions.)
expression
A single expression. It matches when its value is nonzero (if a number) or non-null (if a string). (See Expressions as Patterns.)
begpat, endpat
A pair of patterns separated by a comma, specifying a range of records. The range includes both the initial record that matches begpat and the final record that matches endpat. (See Specifying Record Ranges with Patterns.)
BEGIN
END
Special patterns for you to supply startup or cleanup actions for your
awk
program.
(See The BEGIN
and END
Special Patterns.)
BEGINFILE
ENDFILE
Special patterns for you to supply startup or cleanup actions to be
done on a per-file basis.
(See The BEGINFILE
and ENDFILE
Special Patterns.)
empty
The empty pattern matches every input record. (See The Empty Pattern.)