# sum integers from a file or STDIN, one integer per line: printf '1\n2\n3\n' | awk '{ sum += $1} END {print sum}' # using specific character as separator to sum integers from a file or STDIN printf '1:2:3' | awk -F ":" '{print $1+$2+$3}' # print a multiplication table seq 9 | sed 'H;g' | awk -v RS='' '{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++)printf("%dx%d=%d%s", i, NR, i*NR, i==NR?"\n":"\t")}' # Specify output separator character printf '1 2 3' | awk 'BEGIN {OFS=":"}; {print $1,$2,$3}' # search for a paragraph containing string awk -v RS='' '/42B/' file # display only first column from multi-column text echo "first-column second-column third-column" | awk '{print $1}' # Use AWK solo; without the need for something via STDIN. awk BEGIN'{printf("Example text.\n")}' # Accessing environment variables from within AWK. awk 'BEGIN{print ENVIRON["LS_COLORS"]}' # One method to count the number of lines; in this case, read from STDIN. free | awk '{i++} END{print i}' # Output unique list of available sections under which to create a DEB package. awk '!A[$1]++{print($1)}' <<< "$(dpkg-query --show -f='${Section}\n')" # Using process substitution (`<()` is NOT command substitution), with AWK and # its associative array variables, we can print just column 2 for lines whose # first column is equal to what's between the double-quotes. awk '{NR!=1&&A[$1]=$2} END{print(A["Mem:"])}' <(free -h) # While below is an easier and simpler solution to the above, it's not at all # the same, and in other cases, the above is definitely preferable. awk '/^Mem:/{print($2)}' <(free -h) # Output list of unique uppercase-only, sigil-omitted variables used in [FILE]. awk '{for(F=0; F=1000 && $1!="nobody" {printf("%-17s %-d %-d %-s\n", $1, $3, $4, $7)}' /etc/passwd # Display the total amount of MiB of RAM available in the machine. This is also # a painful but useful workaround to get the units comma-separated, as would be # doable with Bash's own `printf` built-in. awk '/^MemTotal:/ {printf("%'"'"'dMiB\n", $2 / 1024)}'