Without using sed
or awk
, only cut
, how do I get the last field when the number of fields are unknown or change with every line?
12 Answers
Use a parameter expansion. This is much more efficient than any kind of external command, cut
(or grep
) included.
data=foo,bar,baz,qux
last=${data##*,}
See BashFAQ #100 for an introduction to native string manipulation in bash.
It is not possible using just cut
. Here is a way using grep
:
grep -o '[^,]*$'
Replace the comma for other delimiters.
Explanation:
-o
(--only-matching
) only outputs the part of the input that matches the pattern (the default is to print the entire line if it contains a match).[^,]
is a character class that matches any character other than a comma.*
matches the preceding pattern zero or more time, so[^,]*
matches zero or more non‑comma characters.$
matches the end of the string.- Putting this together, the pattern matches zero or more non-comma characters at the end of the string.
- When there are multiple possible matches,
grep
prefers the one that starts earliest. So the entire last field will be matched.
Full example:
If we have a file called data.csv containing
one,two,three
foo,bar
then grep -o '[^,]*$' < data.csv
will output
three
bar
This is the only solution possible for using nothing but cut:
echo "s.t.r.i.n.g." | cut -d'.' -f2- [repeat_following_part_forever_or_until_out_of_memory:] | cut -d'.' -f2-
Using this solution, the number of fields can indeed be unknown and vary from time to time. However as line length must not exceed LINE_MAX characters or fields, including the new-line character, then an arbitrary number of fields can never be part as a real condition of this solution.
Yes, a very silly solution but the only one that meets the criterias I think.
If your input string doesn't contain forward slashes then you can use basename
and a subshell:
$ basename "$(echo 'maps.google.com' | tr '.' '/')"
This doesn't use sed
or awk
but it also doesn't use cut
either, so I'm not quite sure if it qualifies as an answer to the question as its worded.
This doesn't work well if processing input strings that can contain forward slashes. A workaround for that situation would be to replace forward slash with some other character that you know isn't part of a valid input string. For example, the pipe (|
) character is also not allowed in filenames, so this would work:
$ basename "$(echo 'maps.google.com/some/url/things' | tr '/' '|' | tr '.' '/')" | tr '|' '/'
the following implements A friend's suggestion
#!/bin/bash
rcut(){
nu="$( echo $1 | cut -d"$DELIM" -f 2- )"
if [ "$nu" != "$1" ]
then
rcut "$nu"
else
echo "$nu"
fi
}
$ export DELIM=.
$ rcut a.b.c.d
d
Adding an approach to this old question just for the fun of it:
$ cat input.file # file containing input that needs to be processed
a;b;c;d;e
1;2;3;4;5
no delimiter here
124;adsf;15454
foo;bar;is;null;info
$ cat tmp.sh # showing off the script to do the job
#!/bin/bash
delim=';'
while read -r line; do
while [[ "$line" =~ "$delim" ]]; do
line=$(cut -d"$delim" -f 2- <<<"$line")
done
echo "$line"
done < input.file
$ ./tmp.sh # output of above script/processed input file
e
5
no delimiter here
15454
info
Besides bash, only cut is used. Well, and echo, I guess.
cut
command :)? why not any other Linux commands? – Jayesh Bhoised
orawk
:perl -pe 's/^.+\s+([^\s]+)$/$1/'
. – jordanmcut
supports something it doesn't. But I thought it was useful, in that it forces the reader to consider code that's easier to follow. I wanted a quick, simple way to usecut
without needing to use multiple syntaxes forawk
,grep
,sed
, etc. Therev
thing did the trick; very elegant, and something I've never considered (even if clunky for other situations). I also liked reading the other approaches from the other answers. – Beejorfind | cut -d. -f<last>
is the natural inclination – studog