The history behind AWK
The awk
command is a command suite mainstay in both UNIX and Linux. The UNIX awk
command was first developed by Bell Labs in the 1970s and is named after the surnames of the main authors: Alfred Aho, Peter Weinberger, and Brian Kernighan. The awk
command allows access to the AWK programming language, which is designed to process data within text streams.
There are many implementations of AWK:
- gawk: Also known as GNU AWK, it is a free version of AWK and used by many developers; we will use it in this book.
- mawk: Another implementation made by a guy named Mike Brennan. This implementation only includes a few gawk features; it was designed for speed and performance.
- tawk: Or Thompson AWK, is an implementation that works on Solaris, DOS, and Windows.
- BWK awk: Also known as nawk, it is used by OpenBSD and macOS.
Note that the awk
interpreter that we will use in this book is gawk
but there is a symbolic link for it with the name awk
. So awk
and gawk
are the same command.
You can...