I am trying to match a fixed number of digits using curly braces in awk
but I get no result.
# This outputs nothing
echo "123" | awk '/^[0-9]{3}$/ {print $1;}'
# This outputs 123
echo "123" | awk '/^[0-9]+$/ {print $1;}'
Do I need to do something specific to use curly braces?
Mac OS X awk
(BSD awk
) works with the first command shown:
$ echo "123" | /usr/bin/awk '/^[0-9]{3}$/ {print $1;}'
123
$
GNU awk
does not. Adding backslashes doesn't help GNU awk
. Using option --re-interval
does, and so does using --posix
.
$ echo "123" | /usr/gnu/bin/awk --re-interval '/^[0-9]{3}$/ {print $1;}'
123
$ echo "123" | /usr/gnu/bin/awk --posix '/^[0-9]{3}$/ {print $1;}'
123
$
(I'm not sure where mawk
1.3.3 dated 1996 comes from, but it is probably time to get an updated version of awk
for your machine.)
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