Differences between revisions 31 and 39 (spanning 8 versions)
Revision 31 as of 2016-09-20 10:12:31
Size: 1648
Editor: geirha
Comment: There's a better mapfile example further down
Revision 39 as of 2020-05-07 08:35:17
Size: 1685
Editor: intranet
Comment: fix awk code injection
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
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Another method is to grab the last line from a listing of the first `n` lines: Another method is to grab lines starting at `n`, then get the first line of that.
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head -n "$n" "$file" | tail -n 1 tail -n "+$n" "$file" | head -n 1
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awk "NR==$n{print;exit}" "$file" awk -v n="$n" 'NR==n{print;exit}' "$file"
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head -n "$y" "$file" | tail -n $((y - x + 1)) # Same head -n "$y" "$file" | tail -n "$((y - x + 1))" # Same
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awk "NR>=$x{print} NR==$y{exit}" "$file" # Same awk -v x="$x" -v y="$y" 'NR>=x{print} NR==y{exit}' "$file" # Same
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mapfile -ts $((n-1)) -n 1 x <"$file" mapfile -ts "$((n - 1))" -n 1 x <"$file"

How can I print the n'th line of a file?

One dirty (but not quick) way is:

   1 sed -n "${n}p" "$file"

But this reads the entire file even if only the third line is desired, which can be avoided by using the q command to quit on line $n, and deleting all other lines with the d command:

   1 sed "${n}q;d" "$file"

Another method is to grab lines starting at n, then get the first line of that.

   1 tail -n "+$n" "$file" | head -n 1

Another approach, using AWK:

   1 awk -v n="$n" 'NR==n{print;exit}' "$file"

If more than one line is needed, it's easy to adapt any of the previous methods:

   1 x=3 y=4
   2 sed -n "$x,${y}p;${y}q;" "$file"                # Print lines $x to $y; quit after $y.
   3 head -n "$y" "$file" | tail -n "$((y - x + 1))"   # Same
   4 head -n "$y" "$file" | tail -n "+$x"            # If your tail supports it
   5 awk -v x="$x" -v y="$y" 'NR>=x{print} NR==y{exit}' "$file"        # Same

Or a counter with a simple read loop:

   1 # Bash/ksh
   2 m=0
   3 while ((m++ < n)) && read -r _; do
   4     :
   5 done
   6 
   7 head -n 1

To read into a variable, it is preferable to use read or mapfile rather than an external utility. More than one line can be read into the given array variable or the default array MAPFILE by adjusting the argument to mapfile's -n option:

   1 # Bash4
   2 mapfile -ts "$((n - 1))" -n 1 x <"$file"
   3 printf '%s\n' "$x"

See Also


CategoryShell

BashFAQ/011 (last edited 2020-05-07 08:35:17 by intranet)