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Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook, Second Edition

You're reading from   Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook, Second Edition Don't neglect the shell ‚Äì this book will empower you to use simple commands to perform complex tasks. Whether you're a casual or advanced Linux user, the cookbook approach makes it all so brilliantly accessible and, above all, useful.

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782162742
Length 384 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Shell Something Out FREE CHAPTER 2. Have a Good Command 3. File In, File Out 4. Texting and Driving 5. Tangled Web? Not At All! 6. The Backup Plan 7. The Old-boy Network 8. Put on the Monitor's Cap 9. Administration Calls Index

Printing lines in the reverse order


This is a very simple recipe. It may not seem very useful, but it can be used to emulate the stack datastructure in Bash. This is something interesting. Let's print the lines of text in a file in reverse order.

Getting ready

A little hack with awk can do the task. However, there is a direct command, tac , to do the same as well. tac is the reverse of cat.

How to do it...

We will first see how to do this with tac.

  1. The tac syntax is as follows:

    tac file1 file2 …
    

    It can also read from stdin, as follows:

    $ seq 5 | tac
    5 
    4 
    3 
    2 
    1
    

    In tac, \n is the line separator. But, we can also specify our own separator by using the -s "separator" option.

  2. We can do it in awk as follows:

    $ seq 9 | \
    awk '{ lifo[NR]=$0 } 
    END{ for(lno=NR;lno>-1;lno--){ print lifo[lno]; } 
    }'
    

    \ in the shell script is used to conveniently break a single line command sequence into multiple lines.

How it works...

The awk script is very simple. We store each of the lines into an associative array...

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