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GNU awk: accessing captured groups in replacement text

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-08 21:13 出处:网络
This seems like it should be dirt simple, but the awk gensub/gsub/sub behavior has always been unclear to me, and now I just can\'t get it to do what the documentation says it should do (and what expe

This seems like it should be dirt simple, but the awk gensub/gsub/sub behavior has always been unclear to me, and now I just can't get it to do what the documentation says it should do (and what experience with a zillion other similar tools suggests should work). Specifically, I want to access "captured groups" from a regex in the replacement string. Here's what I think the awk syntax should be:

awk '{ gsub(/a(b*)c/, "Here are bees: \1"); print; }'

开发者_如何学PythonThat should turn "abbbc" into "Here are bees: bbb". It does not, at least not for me in Ubunutu 9.04. Instead, the "\1" is rendered as a ^A; that is, the character with code 1. Not what I want, of course. How do I do this?

Thanks.


With GNU awk:

echo abbc | awk '{ print gensub(/a(b*)c/, "Here are bees: \\1", "g", $1);}'

See manual here to see the difference between gsub and gensub

gensub() provides an additional feature that is not available in sub() or gsub(): the ability to specify components of a regexp in the replacement text. This is done by using parentheses in the regexp to mark the components and then specifying ‘\N’ in the replacement text, where N is a digit from 1 to 9.


Per the gawk manual

gensub provides an additional feature that is not available in sub or gsub: the ability to specify components of a regexp in the replacement text. This is done by using parentheses in the regexp to mark the components and then specifying ‘\N’ in the replacement text, where N is a digit from 1 to 9.

You must use gensub, you must specify "g", and you must grab the result of gensub, since it does not modify in-place.

awk '{ r = gensub(/a(b*)c/, "Here are bees: \\1", "g"); print r; }'
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