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Find duplicate lines in a file and count how many time each line was duplicated?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-20 20:43 出处:网络
Suppose I have a file similar to the following: 123 123 234 234 123 345 I would like to find how m开发者_如何学编程any times \'123\' was duplicated, how many times \'234\' was duplicated, etc.

Suppose I have a file similar to the following:

123 
123 
234 
234 
123 
345

I would like to find how m开发者_如何学编程any times '123' was duplicated, how many times '234' was duplicated, etc. So ideally, the output would be like:

123  3 
234  2 
345  1


Assuming there is one number per line:

sort <file> | uniq -c

You can use the more verbose --count flag too with the GNU version, e.g., on Linux:

sort <file> | uniq --count


This will print duplicate lines only, with counts:

sort FILE | uniq -cd

or, with GNU long options (on Linux):

sort FILE | uniq --count --repeated

on BSD and OSX you have to use grep to filter out unique lines:

sort FILE | uniq -c | grep -v '^ *1 '

For the given example, the result would be:

  3 123
  2 234

If you want to print counts for all lines including those that appear only once:

sort FILE | uniq -c

or, with GNU long options (on Linux):

sort FILE | uniq --count

For the given input, the output is:

  3 123
  2 234
  1 345

In order to sort the output with the most frequent lines on top, you can do the following (to get all results):

sort FILE | uniq -c | sort -nr

or, to get only duplicate lines, most frequent first:

sort FILE | uniq -cd | sort -nr

on OSX and BSD the final one becomes:

sort FILE | uniq -c | grep -v '^ *1 ' | sort -nr


To find and count duplicate lines in multiple files, you can try the following command:

sort <files> | uniq -c | sort -nr

or:

cat <files> | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr


Via awk:

awk '{dups[$1]++} END{for (num in dups) {print num,dups[num]}}' data

In awk 'dups[$1]++' command, the variable $1 holds the entire contents of column1 and square brackets are array access. So, for each 1st column of line in data file, the node of the array named dups is incremented.

And at the end, we are looping over dups array with num as variable and print the saved numbers first then their number of duplicated value by dups[num].

Note that your input file has spaces on end of some lines, if you clear up those, you can use $0 in place of $1 in command above :)


In Windows, using "Windows PowerShell", I used the command mentioned below to achieve this

Get-Content .\file.txt | Group-Object | Select Name, Count

Also, we can use the where-object Cmdlet to filter the result

Get-Content .\file.txt | Group-Object | Where-Object { $_.Count -gt 1 } | Select Name, Count


To find duplicate counts, use this command:

sort filename | uniq -c | awk '{print $2, $1}'


Assuming you've got access to a standard Unix shell and/or cygwin environment:

tr -s ' ' '\n' < yourfile | sort | uniq -d -c
       ^--space char

Basically: convert all space characters to linebreaks, then sort the tranlsated output and feed that to uniq and count duplicate lines.

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