One of the most common programming actions is to print, or output,
some or all of the input. Use the print
statement
for simple output, and the printf
statement
for fancier formatting.
The print
statement is not limited when
computing which values to print. However, with two exceptions,
you cannot specify how to print them—how many
columns, whether to use exponential notation or not, and so on.
(For the exceptions, see Output Separators and
Controlling Numeric Output with print
.)
For printing with specifications, you need the printf
statement
(see Using printf
Statements for Fancier Printing).
Besides basic and formatted printing, this chapter
also covers I/O redirections to files and pipes, introduces
the special file names that gawk
processes internally,
and discusses the close()
built-in function.
print
Statementprint
Statement Examplesprint
printf
Statements for Fancier Printingprint
and printf
gawk