The uniq
program
(see section Printing Non-duplicated Lines of Text),
removes duplicate lines from sorted data.
Suppose, however, you need to remove duplicate lines from a data file, but that you wish to preserve the order the lines are in? A good example of this might be a shell history file. The history file keeps a copy of all the commands you have entered, and it is not unusual to repeat a command several times in a row. Occasionally you might wish to compact the history by removing duplicate entries. Yet it is desirable to maintain the order of the original commands.
This simple program does the job. It uses two arrays. The data
array is indexed by the text of each line.
For each line, data[$0]
is incremented.
If a particular line has not
been seen before, then data[$0]
will be zero.
In that case, the text of the line is stored in lines[count]
.
Each element of lines
is a unique command, and the indices of
lines
indicate the order in which those lines were encountered.
The END
rule simply prints out the lines, in order.
# histsort.awk --- compact a shell history file # Arnold Robbins, [email protected], Public Domain # May 1993 # Thanks to Byron Rakitzis for the general idea { if (data[$0]++ == 0) lines[++count] = $0 } END { for (i = 1; i <= count; i++) print lines[i] }
This program also provides a foundation for generating other useful
information. For example, using the following print
satement in the
END
rule would indicate how often a particular command was used.
print data[lines[i]], lines[i]
This works because data[$0]
was incremented each time a line was
seen.
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