Path: ...!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: David Chmelik Newsgroups: alt.comp.lang.awk,comp.lang.awk Subject: printing words without newlines? Followup-To: alt.comp.lang.awk,comp.lang.awk Date: Sun, 12 May 2024 04:57:16 -0000 (UTC) Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 37 Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Date: Sun, 12 May 2024 06:57:16 +0200 (CEST) Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="dde441e1ae9f53564db448737d7214ef"; logging-data="2466035"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX19fMkXjaqbwNoki+B+MEmCarV4O8wSZOKo=" User-Agent: Pan/0.158 (Avdiivka; 6a11104e) Cancel-Lock: sha1:ocv8NU5wbIsGaRQ6JdYUaOY1cPY= Bytes: 2261 I'm learning more AWK basics and wrote function to read file, sort, print. I use GNU AWK (gawk) and its sort but printing is harder to get working than anything... separate lines work, but when I use printf() or set ORS then use print (for words one line) all awk outputs (on FreeBSD UNIX 14 and Slackware GNU/Linux 15) is a space (and not even newline before shell prompt)... is this normal (and I made mistake?) or am I approaching it wrong? I recall BASIC prints new lines, but as I learned basic C and some derivatives, I'm used to newlines only being specified... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ # print_file_words.awk # pass filename to function BEGIN { print_file_words("data.txt"); } # read two-column array from file and sort lines and print function print_file_words(file) { # set record separator then use print # ORS=" " while(getline