To be fair, a lot of the programs don’t use a single character, have multiple spaces between fields, and cut doesn’t collapse whitespace characters, so you probably want something more like tr -s " "|cut -d" " -f3 if you want behavior like awk’s field-splitting.
This is awesome! Looks like an LPI1 textbook. Never got the certification but I’ve seen a couple books about it and remember seeing examples like this one.
cut?
To be fair, a lot of the programs don’t use a single character, have multiple spaces between fields, and
cut
doesn’t collapse whitespace characters, so you probably want something more liketr -s " "|cut -d" " -f3
if you want behavior likeawk
’s field-splitting.This is awesome! Looks like an LPI1 textbook. Never got the certification but I’ve seen a couple books about it and remember seeing examples like this one.
I never understood why so many bash scripts pipe grep to awk when regex is one of its main strengths.
Like… Why
grep ^nvme0n1 | awk '{print $3}'
over just
awk '/^nvme0n1/ {print $3}'
Because by the time I use
awk
again, I’ve completely forgotten that it supports this stuff, and the discoverability is horrendous.