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Delete multiple columns using awk or sed
split string with awk and delimiterFiltering a line with sedUsing Regex Breaking a text on the last digit using linux tools like sed, or awkEvaluate Expression within awkawk: matching strings to decimal values and summing themsed remove last 2 numeralsremove 2nd line of output using awkwrite a number of strings using awkBash help: awk columnsPipe stdout through sed or awk command BEFORE redirecting to file?
I have a database with 6037 space-separated columns and 450 rows like the one below:
1807 1452 1598 1 6.655713 A B A B ... 0
1808 1452 1763 1 9.362033 0 0 A B ... A
1809 1452 1527 2 6.728534 A B A A ... B
1810 1452 1367 2 9.4055 A B A A B ... A
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
1812 1452 1258 1 6.363032 0 0 A B ... B
I want to get a new database with only the first 676 columns.
Preferably, some form that uses awk
or sed
command.
text-processing sed awk
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I have a database with 6037 space-separated columns and 450 rows like the one below:
1807 1452 1598 1 6.655713 A B A B ... 0
1808 1452 1763 1 9.362033 0 0 A B ... A
1809 1452 1527 2 6.728534 A B A A ... B
1810 1452 1367 2 9.4055 A B A A B ... A
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
1812 1452 1258 1 6.363032 0 0 A B ... B
I want to get a new database with only the first 676 columns.
Preferably, some form that uses awk
or sed
command.
text-processing sed awk
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago
add a comment |
I have a database with 6037 space-separated columns and 450 rows like the one below:
1807 1452 1598 1 6.655713 A B A B ... 0
1808 1452 1763 1 9.362033 0 0 A B ... A
1809 1452 1527 2 6.728534 A B A A ... B
1810 1452 1367 2 9.4055 A B A A B ... A
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
1812 1452 1258 1 6.363032 0 0 A B ... B
I want to get a new database with only the first 676 columns.
Preferably, some form that uses awk
or sed
command.
text-processing sed awk
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I have a database with 6037 space-separated columns and 450 rows like the one below:
1807 1452 1598 1 6.655713 A B A B ... 0
1808 1452 1763 1 9.362033 0 0 A B ... A
1809 1452 1527 2 6.728534 A B A A ... B
1810 1452 1367 2 9.4055 A B A A B ... A
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
1812 1452 1258 1 6.363032 0 0 A B ... B
I want to get a new database with only the first 676 columns.
Preferably, some form that uses awk
or sed
command.
text-processing sed awk
text-processing sed awk
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 21 mins ago


dessert
24.7k672105
24.7k672105
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 2 hours ago
andrecandrec
61
61
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
andrec is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago
add a comment |
The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago
The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago
The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
If the column delimiter in your file is a single character, e.g. a space, cut
can do that easily:
cut -d' ' -f-676 <in >out
This prints only the space-separated columns from the first to the 676th.
If you need e.g. every whitespace character to count as a delimiter, a sed
solution is:
sed -r 's/s+S+//677g' <in >out
This replaces every column (= at least one whitespace character followed by at least one non-whitespace character) beginning with the 677th with nothing. Using character groups you can specify any set of delimiters you need, e.g. for “4”, “#” and “K”:
sed -r 's/[4#K]+[^4#K]+//677g' <in >out
For a reasonable awk
approach kindly refer to steeldriver’s answer, but here is another one looping over the columns and only printing them (separated by FS
) if their number is <= 676:
awk 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":FS)$i; print ""' <in >out
For a character group you have to specify the output field separator for the output, e.g. for [4#K]
and "sep"
:
awk -F'[4#K]' 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":"sep")$i; print ""' <in >out
add a comment |
For a single-character delimiter (such as space or comma) I would recommend using the cut
command over either awk
or sed
.
However since you asked about awk
specifically, I think a reasonable way to do it would be to decrement the field count:
awk -v last=676 'while(NF>last) NF-- 1' datafile
Tested in GNU Awk (gawk
) and mawk
.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If the column delimiter in your file is a single character, e.g. a space, cut
can do that easily:
cut -d' ' -f-676 <in >out
This prints only the space-separated columns from the first to the 676th.
If you need e.g. every whitespace character to count as a delimiter, a sed
solution is:
sed -r 's/s+S+//677g' <in >out
This replaces every column (= at least one whitespace character followed by at least one non-whitespace character) beginning with the 677th with nothing. Using character groups you can specify any set of delimiters you need, e.g. for “4”, “#” and “K”:
sed -r 's/[4#K]+[^4#K]+//677g' <in >out
For a reasonable awk
approach kindly refer to steeldriver’s answer, but here is another one looping over the columns and only printing them (separated by FS
) if their number is <= 676:
awk 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":FS)$i; print ""' <in >out
For a character group you have to specify the output field separator for the output, e.g. for [4#K]
and "sep"
:
awk -F'[4#K]' 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":"sep")$i; print ""' <in >out
add a comment |
If the column delimiter in your file is a single character, e.g. a space, cut
can do that easily:
cut -d' ' -f-676 <in >out
This prints only the space-separated columns from the first to the 676th.
If you need e.g. every whitespace character to count as a delimiter, a sed
solution is:
sed -r 's/s+S+//677g' <in >out
This replaces every column (= at least one whitespace character followed by at least one non-whitespace character) beginning with the 677th with nothing. Using character groups you can specify any set of delimiters you need, e.g. for “4”, “#” and “K”:
sed -r 's/[4#K]+[^4#K]+//677g' <in >out
For a reasonable awk
approach kindly refer to steeldriver’s answer, but here is another one looping over the columns and only printing them (separated by FS
) if their number is <= 676:
awk 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":FS)$i; print ""' <in >out
For a character group you have to specify the output field separator for the output, e.g. for [4#K]
and "sep"
:
awk -F'[4#K]' 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":"sep")$i; print ""' <in >out
add a comment |
If the column delimiter in your file is a single character, e.g. a space, cut
can do that easily:
cut -d' ' -f-676 <in >out
This prints only the space-separated columns from the first to the 676th.
If you need e.g. every whitespace character to count as a delimiter, a sed
solution is:
sed -r 's/s+S+//677g' <in >out
This replaces every column (= at least one whitespace character followed by at least one non-whitespace character) beginning with the 677th with nothing. Using character groups you can specify any set of delimiters you need, e.g. for “4”, “#” and “K”:
sed -r 's/[4#K]+[^4#K]+//677g' <in >out
For a reasonable awk
approach kindly refer to steeldriver’s answer, but here is another one looping over the columns and only printing them (separated by FS
) if their number is <= 676:
awk 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":FS)$i; print ""' <in >out
For a character group you have to specify the output field separator for the output, e.g. for [4#K]
and "sep"
:
awk -F'[4#K]' 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":"sep")$i; print ""' <in >out
If the column delimiter in your file is a single character, e.g. a space, cut
can do that easily:
cut -d' ' -f-676 <in >out
This prints only the space-separated columns from the first to the 676th.
If you need e.g. every whitespace character to count as a delimiter, a sed
solution is:
sed -r 's/s+S+//677g' <in >out
This replaces every column (= at least one whitespace character followed by at least one non-whitespace character) beginning with the 677th with nothing. Using character groups you can specify any set of delimiters you need, e.g. for “4”, “#” and “K”:
sed -r 's/[4#K]+[^4#K]+//677g' <in >out
For a reasonable awk
approach kindly refer to steeldriver’s answer, but here is another one looping over the columns and only printing them (separated by FS
) if their number is <= 676:
awk 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":FS)$i; print ""' <in >out
For a character group you have to specify the output field separator for the output, e.g. for [4#K]
and "sep"
:
awk -F'[4#K]' 'for (i=1;i<=676;i++) printf (i==1?"":"sep")$i; print ""' <in >out
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago


dessertdessert
24.7k672105
24.7k672105
add a comment |
add a comment |
For a single-character delimiter (such as space or comma) I would recommend using the cut
command over either awk
or sed
.
However since you asked about awk
specifically, I think a reasonable way to do it would be to decrement the field count:
awk -v last=676 'while(NF>last) NF-- 1' datafile
Tested in GNU Awk (gawk
) and mawk
.
add a comment |
For a single-character delimiter (such as space or comma) I would recommend using the cut
command over either awk
or sed
.
However since you asked about awk
specifically, I think a reasonable way to do it would be to decrement the field count:
awk -v last=676 'while(NF>last) NF-- 1' datafile
Tested in GNU Awk (gawk
) and mawk
.
add a comment |
For a single-character delimiter (such as space or comma) I would recommend using the cut
command over either awk
or sed
.
However since you asked about awk
specifically, I think a reasonable way to do it would be to decrement the field count:
awk -v last=676 'while(NF>last) NF-- 1' datafile
Tested in GNU Awk (gawk
) and mawk
.
For a single-character delimiter (such as space or comma) I would recommend using the cut
command over either awk
or sed
.
However since you asked about awk
specifically, I think a reasonable way to do it would be to decrement the field count:
awk -v last=676 'while(NF>last) NF-- 1' datafile
Tested in GNU Awk (gawk
) and mawk
.
edited 39 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
steeldriversteeldriver
69.8k11114186
69.8k11114186
add a comment |
add a comment |
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The delimiter is the space.
– andrec
50 mins ago