The syntax for invoking awk has two forms:
awk [options] 'script' var=value file(s) awk [options] -f scriptfile var=value file(s)
You can specify a script directly on the command line, or you can store a script in a scriptfile and specify it with -f. nawk allows multiple -f scripts. Variables can be assigned a value on the command line. The value can be a literal, a shell variable ($name), or a command substitution (‘cmd‘), but the value is available only after the BEGIN statement is executed.
awk operates on one or more files. If none are specified (or if - is specified), awk reads from the standard input.
The recognized options are:
To print the first three (colon-separated) fields of each record on separate lines:
awk -F: '{ print $1; print $2; print $3 }' /etc/passwd
More examples are shown in Section 11.3.3.
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