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5.5.1 Introduction to the printf
Statement
A simple printf
statement looks like this:
printf format, item1, item2, … |
The entire list of arguments may optionally be enclosed in parentheses. The
parentheses are necessary if any of the item expressions use the ‘>’
relational operator; otherwise, it can be confused with an output redirection
(see section Redirecting Output of print
and printf
).
The difference between printf
and print
is the format
argument. This is an expression whose value is taken as a string; it
specifies how to output each of the other arguments. It is called the
format string.
The format string is very similar to that in the ISO C library function
printf()
. Most of format is text to output verbatim.
Scattered among this text are format specifiers—one per item.
Each format specifier says to output the next item in the argument list
at that place in the format.
The printf
statement does not automatically append a newline
to its output. It outputs only what the format string specifies.
So if a newline is needed, you must include one in the format string.
The output separator variables OFS
and ORS
have no effect
on printf
statements. For example:
$ awk 'BEGIN { > ORS = "\nOUCH!\n"; OFS = "+" > msg = "Dont Panic!" > printf "%s\n", msg > }' -| Dont Panic! |
Here, neither the ‘+’ nor the ‘OUCH’ appear in the output message.
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