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AWK(1P)			POSIX Programmer's Manual		 AWK(1P)

PROLOG
       This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The
       Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult the
       corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior),
       or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME
       awk -- pattern scanning and processing language

SYNOPSIS
       awk [-F sepstring] [-v assignment]... program [argument...]

       awk [-F sepstring] -f progfile [-f progfile]... [-v assignment]...
	    [argument...]

DESCRIPTION
       The awk utility shall execute programs written in the awk
       programming language, which is specialized for textual data
       manipulation. An awk program is a sequence of patterns and
       corresponding actions. When input is read that matches a pattern,
       the action associated with that pattern is carried out.

       Input shall be interpreted as a sequence of records. By default,
       a record is a line, less its terminating <newline>, but this can
       be changed by using the RS built-in variable. Each record of
       input shall be matched in turn against each pattern in the
       program. For each pattern matched, the associated action shall be
       executed.

       The awk utility shall interpret each input record as a sequence
       of fields where, by default, a field is a string of non-<blank>
       non-<newline> characters. This default <blank> and <newline>
       field delimiter can be changed by using the FS built-in variable
       or the -F sepstring option. The awk utility shall denote the
       first field in a record $1, the second $2, and so on. The symbol
       $0 shall refer to the entire record; setting any other field
       causes the re-evaluation of $0. Assigning to $0 shall reset the
       values of all other fields and the NF built-in variable.

OPTIONS
       The awk utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of
       POSIX.1-2017, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines.

       The following options shall be supported:

       -F sepstring
		 Define the input field separator. This option shall be
		 equivalent to:


		     -v FS=sepstring

		 except that if -F sepstring and -v FS=sepstring are
		 both used, it is unspecified whether the FS assignment
		 resulting from -F sepstring is processed in command
		 line order or is processed after the last -v
		 FS=sepstring.	See the description of the FS built-in
		 variable, and how it is used, in the EXTENDED
		 DESCRIPTION section.

       -f progfile
		 Specify the pathname of the file progfile containing an
		 awk program. A pathname of '-' shall denote the
		 standard input. If multiple instances of this option
		 are specified, the concatenation of the files specified
		 as progfile in the order specified shall be the awk
		 program. The awk program can alternatively be specified
		 in the command line as a single argument.

       -v assignment
		 The application shall ensure that the assignment
		 argument is in the same form as an assignment operand.
		 The specified variable assignment shall occur prior to
		 executing the awk program, including the actions
		 associated with BEGIN patterns (if any). Multiple
		 occurrences of this option can be specified.

OPERANDS
       The following operands shall be supported:

       program	 If no -f option is specified, the first operand to awk
		 shall be the text of the awk program. The application
		 shall supply the program operand as a single argument
		 to awk.  If the text does not end in a <newline>, awk
		 shall interpret the text as if it did.

       argument	 Either of the following two types of argument can be
		 intermixed:

		 file	   A pathname of a file that contains the input
			   to be read, which is matched against the set
			   of patterns in the program. If no file
			   operands are specified, or if a file operand
			   is '-', the standard input shall be used.

		 assignment
			   An operand that begins with an <underscore>
			   or alphabetic character from the portable
			   character set (see the table in the Base
			   Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Section
			   6.1, Portable Character Set), followed by a
			   sequence of underscores, digits, and
			   alphabetics from the portable character set,
			   followed by the '=' character, shall specify
			   a variable assignment rather than a pathname.
			   The characters before the '=' represent the
			   name of an awk variable; if that name is an
			   awk reserved word (see Grammar) the behavior
			   is undefined. The characters following the
			   <equals-sign> shall be interpreted as if they
			   appeared in the awk program preceded and
			   followed by a double-quote ('"') character,
			   as a STRING token (see Grammar), except that
			   if the last character is an unescaped
			   <backslash>, it shall be interpreted as a
			   literal <backslash> rather than as the first
			   character of the sequence "\"".  The variable
			   shall be assigned the value of that STRING
			   token and, if appropriate, shall be
			   considered a numeric string (see Expressions
			   in awk), the variable shall also be assigned
			   its numeric value. Each such variable
			   assignment shall occur just prior to the
			   processing of the following file, if any.
			   Thus, an assignment before the first file
			   argument shall be executed after the BEGIN
			   actions (if any), while an assignment after
			   the last file argument shall occur before the
			   END actions (if any). If there are no file
			   arguments, assignments shall be executed
			   before processing the standard input.

STDIN
       The standard input shall be used only if no file operands are
       specified, or if a file operand is '-', or if a progfile option-
       argument is '-'; see the INPUT FILES section. If the awk program
       contains no actions and no patterns, but is otherwise a valid awk
       program, standard input and any file operands shall not be read
       and awk shall exit with a return status of zero.

INPUT FILES
       Input files to the awk program from any of the following sources
       shall be text files:

	*  Any file operands or their equivalents, achieved by modifying
	   the awk variables ARGV and ARGC

	*  Standard input in the absence of any file operands

	*  Arguments to the getline function

       Whether the variable RS is set to a value other than a <newline>
       or not, for these files, implementations shall support records
       terminated with the specified separator up to {LINE_MAX} bytes
       and may support longer records.

       If -f progfile is specified, the application shall ensure that
       the files named by each of the progfile option-arguments are text
       files and their concatenation, in the same order as they appear
       in the arguments, is an awk program.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of
       awk:

       LANG	 Provide a default value for the internationalization
		 variables that are unset or null. (See the Base
		 Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Section 8.2,
		 Internationalization Variables for the precedence of
		 internationalization variables used to determine the
		 values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL	 If set to a non-empty string value, override the values
		 of all the other internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE
		 Determine the locale for the behavior of ranges,
		 equivalence classes, and multi-character collating
		 elements within regular expressions and in comparisons
		 of string values.

       LC_CTYPE	 Determine the locale for the interpretation of
		 sequences of bytes of text data as characters (for
		 example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte
		 characters in arguments and input files), the behavior
		 of character classes within regular expressions, the
		 identification of characters as letters, and the
		 mapping of uppercase and lowercase characters for the
		 toupper and tolower functions.

       LC_MESSAGES
		 Determine the locale that should be used to affect the
		 format and contents of diagnostic messages written to
		 standard error.

       LC_NUMERIC
		 Determine the radix character used when interpreting
		 numeric input, performing conversions between numeric
		 and string values, and formatting numeric output.
		 Regardless of locale, the <period> character (the
		 decimal-point character of the POSIX locale) is the
		 decimal-point character recognized in processing awk
		 programs (including assignments in command line
		 arguments).

       NLSPATH	 Determine the location of message catalogs for the
		 processing of LC_MESSAGES.

       PATH	 Determine the search path when looking for commands
		 executed by system(expr), or input and output pipes;
		 see the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017,
		 Chapter 8, Environment Variables.

       In addition, all environment variables shall be visible via the
       awk variable ENVIRON.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.

STDOUT
       The nature of the output files depends on the awk program.

STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES
       The nature of the output files depends on the awk program.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
   Overall Program Structure
       An awk program is composed of pairs of the form:


	   pattern { action }

       Either the pattern or the action (including the enclosing brace
       characters) can be omitted.

       A missing pattern shall match any record of input, and a missing
       action shall be equivalent to:


	   { print }

       Execution of the awk program shall start by first executing the
       actions associated with all BEGIN patterns in the order they
       occur in the program. Then each file operand (or standard input
       if no files were specified) shall be processed in turn by reading
       data from the file until a record separator is seen (<newline> by
       default). Before the first reference to a field in the record is
       evaluated, the record shall be split into fields, according to
       the rules in Regular Expressions, using the value of FS that was
       current at the time the record was read. Each pattern in the
       program then shall be evaluated in the order of occurrence, and
       the action associated with each pattern that matches the current
       record executed. The action for a matching pattern shall be
       executed before evaluating subsequent patterns. Finally, the
       actions associated with all END patterns shall be executed in the
       order they occur in the program.

   Expressions in awk
       Expressions describe computations used in patterns and actions.
       In the following table, valid expression operations are given in
       groups from highest precedence first to lowest precedence last,
       with equal-precedence operators grouped between horizontal lines.
       In expression evaluation, where the grammar is formally
       ambiguous, higher precedence operators shall be evaluated before
       lower precedence operators. In this table expr, expr1, expr2, and
       expr3 represent any expression, while lvalue represents any
       entity that can be assigned to (that is, on the left side of an
       assignment operator).  The precise syntax of expressions is given
       in Grammar.

	    Table 4-1: Expressions in Decreasing Precedence in awk

+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|	Syntax	      |		 Name		| Type of Result |Associativity |
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|( expr )	      |Grouping			|Type of expr	 |N/A		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|$expr		      |Field reference		|String		 |N/A		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|lvalue ++	      |Post-increment		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
|lvalue --	      |Post-decrement		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|++ lvalue	      |Pre-increment		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
|-- lvalue	      |Pre-decrement		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr ^ expr	      |Exponentiation		|Numeric	 |Right		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|! expr		      |Logical not		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
|+ expr		      |Unary plus		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
|- expr		      |Unary minus		|Numeric	 |N/A		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr * expr	      |Multiplication		|Numeric	 |Left		|
|expr / expr	      |Division			|Numeric	 |Left		|
|expr % expr	      |Modulus			|Numeric	 |Left		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr + expr	      |Addition			|Numeric	 |Left		|
|expr - expr	      |Subtraction		|Numeric	 |Left		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr expr	      |String concatenation	|String		 |Left		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr < expr	      |Less than		|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr <= expr	      |Less than or equal to	|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr != expr	      |Not equal to		|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr == expr	      |Equal to			|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr > expr	      |Greater than		|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr >= expr	      |Greater than or equal to |Numeric	 |None		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr ~ expr	      |ERE match		|Numeric	 |None		|
|expr !~ expr	      |ERE non-match		|Numeric	 |None		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr in array	      |Array membership		|Numeric	 |Left		|
|( index ) in array   |Multi-dimension array	|Numeric	 |Left		|
|		      |membership		|		 |		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr && expr	      |Logical AND		|Numeric	 |Left		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr || expr	      |Logical OR		|Numeric	 |Left		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|expr1 ? expr2 : expr3|Conditional expression	|Type of selected|Right		|
|		      |				|expr2 or expr3	 |		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
|lvalue ^= expr	      |Exponentiation assignment|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue %= expr	      |Modulus assignment	|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue *= expr	      |Multiplication assignment|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue /= expr	      |Division assignment	|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue += expr	      |Addition assignment	|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue -= expr	      |Subtraction assignment	|Numeric	 |Right		|
|lvalue = expr	      |Assignment		|Type of expr	 |Right		|
+---------------------+-------------------------+----------------+--------------+
       Each expression shall have either a string value, a numeric
       value, or both. Except as stated for specific contexts, the value
       of an expression shall be implicitly converted to the type needed
       for the context in which it is used. A string value shall be
       converted to a numeric value either by the equivalent of the
       following calls to functions defined by the ISO C standard:


	   setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "");
	   numeric_value = atof(string_value);

       or by converting the initial portion of the string to type double
       representation as follows:

	      The input string is decomposed into two parts: an initial,
	      possibly empty, sequence of white-space characters (as
	      specified by isspace()) and a subject sequence interpreted
	      as a floating-point constant.

	      The expected form of the subject sequence is an optional
	      '+' or '-' sign, then a non-empty sequence of digits
	      optionally containing a <period>, then an optional
	      exponent part. An exponent part consists of 'e' or 'E',
	      followed by an optional sign, followed by one or more
	      decimal digits.

	      The sequence starting with the first digit or the <period>
	      (whichever occurs first) is interpreted as a floating
	      constant of the C language, and if neither an exponent
	      part nor a <period> appears, a <period> is assumed to
	      follow the last digit in the string. If the subject
	      sequence begins with a <hyphen-minus>, the value resulting
	      from the conversion is negated.

       A numeric value that is exactly equal to the value of an integer
       (see Section 1.1.2, Concepts Derived from the ISO C Standard)
       shall be converted to a string by the equivalent of a call to the
       sprintf function (see String Functions) with the string "%d" as
       the fmt argument and the numeric value being converted as the
       first and only expr argument. Any other numeric value shall be
       converted to a string by the equivalent of a call to the sprintf
       function with the value of the variable CONVFMT as the fmt
       argument and the numeric value being converted as the first and
       only expr argument. The result of the conversion is unspecified
       if the value of CONVFMT is not a floating-point format
       specification. This volume of POSIX.1-2017 specifies no explicit
       conversions between numbers and strings. An application can force
       an expression to be treated as a number by adding zero to it, or
       can force it to be treated as a string by concatenating the null
       string ("") to it.

       A string value shall be considered a numeric string if it comes
       from one of the following:

	1. Field variables

	2. Input from the getline() function

	3. FILENAME

	4. ARGV array elements

	5. ENVIRON array elements

	6. Array elements created by the split() function

	7. A command line variable assignment

	8. Variable assignment from another numeric string variable

       and an implementation-dependent condition corresponding to either
       case (a) or (b) below is met.

	a. After the equivalent of the following calls to functions
	   defined by the ISO C standard, string_value_end would differ
	   from string_value, and any characters before the terminating
	   null character in string_value_end would be <blank>
	   characters:


	       char *string_value_end;
	       setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "");
	       numeric_value = strtod (string_value, &string_value_end);

	b. After all the following conversions have been applied, the
	   resulting string would lexically be recognized as a NUMBER
	   token as described by the lexical conventions in Grammar:

	   --  All leading and trailing <blank> characters are
	       discarded.

	   --  If the first non-<blank> is '+' or '-', it is discarded.

	   --  Each occurrence of the decimal point character from the
	       current locale is changed to a <period>.
       In case (a) the numeric value of the numeric string shall be the
       value that would be returned by the strtod() call. In case (b) if
       the first non-<blank> is '-', the numeric value of the numeric
       string shall be the negation of the numeric value of the
       recognized NUMBER token; otherwise, the numeric value of the
       numeric string shall be the numeric value of the recognized
       NUMBER token. Whether or not a string is a numeric string shall
       be relevant only in contexts where that term is used in this
       section.

       When an expression is used in a Boolean context, if it has a
       numeric value, a value of zero shall be treated as false and any
       other value shall be treated as true. Otherwise, a string value
       of the null string shall be treated as false and any other value
       shall be treated as true.  A Boolean context shall be one of the
       following:

	*  The first subexpression of a conditional expression

	*  An expression operated on by logical NOT, logical AND, or
	   logical OR

	*  The second expression of a for statement

	*  The expression of an if statement

	*  The expression of the while clause in either a while or
	   do...while statement

	*  An expression used as a pattern (as in Overall Program
	   Structure)

       All arithmetic shall follow the semantics of floating-point
       arithmetic as specified by the ISO C standard (see Section 1.1.2,
       Concepts Derived from the ISO C Standard).

       The value of the expression:


	   expr1 ^ expr2

       shall be equivalent to the value returned by the ISO C standard
       function call:


	   pow(expr1, expr2)

       The expression:


	   lvalue ^= expr

       shall be equivalent to the ISO C standard expression:


	   lvalue = pow(lvalue, expr)

       except that lvalue shall be evaluated only once. The value of the
       expression:


	   expr1 % expr2

       shall be equivalent to the value returned by the ISO C standard
       function call:


	   fmod(expr1, expr2)

       The expression:


	   lvalue %= expr

       shall be equivalent to the ISO C standard expression:


	   lvalue = fmod(lvalue, expr)

       except that lvalue shall be evaluated only once.

       Variables and fields shall be set by the assignment statement:


	   lvalue = expression

       and the type of expression shall determine the resulting variable
       type. The assignment includes the arithmetic assignments ("+=",
       "-=", "*=", "/=", "%=", "^=", "++", "--") all of which shall
       produce a numeric result. The left-hand side of an assignment and
       the target of increment and decrement operators can be one of a
       variable, an array with index, or a field selector.

       The awk language supplies arrays that are used for storing
       numbers or strings.  Arrays need not be declared. They shall
       initially be empty, and their sizes shall change dynamically. The
       subscripts, or element identifiers, are strings, providing a type
       of associative array capability. An array name followed by a
       subscript within square brackets can be used as an lvalue and
       thus as an expression, as described in the grammar; see Grammar.
       Unsubscripted array names can be used in only the following
       contexts:

	*  A parameter in a function definition or function call

	*  The NAME token following any use of the keyword in as
	   specified in the grammar (see Grammar); if the name used in
	   this context is not an array name, the behavior is undefined

       A valid array index shall consist of one or more
       <comma>-separated expressions, similar to the way in which multi-
       dimensional arrays are indexed in some programming languages.
       Because awk arrays are really one-dimensional, such a
       <comma>-separated list shall be converted to a single string by
       concatenating the string values of the separate expressions, each
       separated from the other by the value of the SUBSEP variable.
       Thus, the following two index operations shall be equivalent:


	   var[expr1, expr2, ... exprn]

	   var[expr1 SUBSEP expr2 SUBSEP ... SUBSEP exprn]

       The application shall ensure that a multi-dimensioned index used
       with the in operator is parenthesized. The in operator, which
       tests for the existence of a particular array element, shall not
       cause that element to exist. Any other reference to a nonexistent
       array element shall automatically create it.

       Comparisons (with the '<', "<=", "!=", "==", '>', and ">="
       operators) shall be made numerically if both operands are
       numeric, if one is numeric and the other has a string value that
       is a numeric string, or if one is numeric and the other has the
       uninitialized value.  Otherwise, operands shall be converted to
       strings as required and a string comparison shall be made as
       follows:

	*  For the "!=" and "==" operators, the strings should be
	   compared to check if they are identical but may be compared
	   using the locale-specific collation sequence to check if they
	   collate equally.

	*  For the other operators, the strings shall be compared using
	   the locale-specific collation sequence.

       The value of the comparison expression shall be 1 if the relation
       is true, or 0 if the relation is false.

   Variables and Special Variables
       Variables can be used in an awk program by referencing them. With
       the exception of function parameters (see User-Defined
       Functions), they are not explicitly declared. Function parameter
       names shall be local to the function; all other variable names
       shall be global. The same name shall not be used as both a
       function parameter name and as the name of a function or a
       special awk variable. The same name shall not be used both as a
       variable name with global scope and as the name of a function.
       The same name shall not be used within the same scope both as a
       scalar variable and as an array.	 Uninitialized variables,
       including scalar variables, array elements, and field variables,
       shall have an uninitialized value. An uninitialized value shall
       have both a numeric value of zero and a string value of the empty
       string. Evaluation of variables with an uninitialized value, to
       either string or numeric, shall be determined by the context in
       which they are used.

       Field variables shall be designated by a '


 followed by a number
       or numerical expression. The effect of the field number
       expression evaluating to anything other than a non-negative
       integer is unspecified; uninitialized variables or string values
       need not be converted to numeric values in this context. New
       field variables can be created by assigning a value to them.
       References to nonexistent fields (that is, fields after $NF),
       shall evaluate to the uninitialized value. Such references shall
       not create new fields. However, assigning to a nonexistent field
       (for example, $(NF+2)=5) shall increase the value of NF; create
       any intervening fields with the uninitialized value; and cause
       the value of $0 to be recomputed, with the fields being separated
       by the value of OFS.  Each field variable shall have a string
       value or an uninitialized value when created. Field variables
       shall have the uninitialized value when created from $0 using FS
       and the variable does not contain any characters. If appropriate,
       the field variable shall be considered a numeric string (see
       Expressions in awk).

       Implementations shall support the following other special
       variables that are set by awk:

       ARGC	 The number of elements in the ARGV array.

       ARGV	 An array of command line arguments, excluding options
		 and the program argument, numbered from zero to ARGC-1.

		 The arguments in ARGV can be modified or added to; ARGC
		 can be altered. As each input file ends, awk shall
		 treat the next non-null element of ARGV, up to the
		 current value of ARGC-1, inclusive, as the name of the
		 next input file. Thus, setting an element of ARGV to
		 null means that it shall not be treated as an input
		 file. The name '-' indicates the standard input. If an
		 argument matches the format of an assignment operand,
		 this argument shall be treated as an assignment rather
		 than a file argument.

       CONVFMT	 The printf format for converting numbers to strings
		 (except for output statements, where OFMT is used);
		 "%.6g" by default.

       ENVIRON	 An array representing the value of the environment, as
		 described in the exec functions defined in the System
		 Interfaces volume of POSIX.1-2017. The indices of the
		 array shall be strings consisting of the names of the
		 environment variables, and the value of each array
		 element shall be a string consisting of the value of
		 that variable. If appropriate, the environment variable
		 shall be considered a numeric string (see Expressions
		 in awk); the array element shall also have its numeric
		 value.

		 In all cases where the behavior of awk is affected by
		 environment variables (including the environment of any
		 commands that awk executes via the system function or
		 via pipeline redirections with the print statement, the
		 printf statement, or the getline function), the
		 environment used shall be the environment at the time
		 awk began executing; it is implementation-defined
		 whether any modification of ENVIRON affects this
		 environment.

       FILENAME	 A pathname of the current input file. Inside a BEGIN
		 action the value is undefined. Inside an END action the
		 value shall be the name of the last input file
		 processed.

       FNR	 The ordinal number of the current record in the current
		 file. Inside a BEGIN action the value shall be zero.
		 Inside an END action the value shall be the number of
		 the last record processed in the last file processed.

       FS	 Input field separator regular expression; a <space> by
		 default.

       NF	 The number of fields in the current record. Inside a
		 BEGIN action, the use of NF is undefined unless a
		 getline function without a var argument is executed
		 previously. Inside an END action, NF shall retain the
		 value it had for the last record read, unless a
		 subsequent, redirected, getline function without a var
		 argument is performed prior to entering the END action.

       NR	 The ordinal number of the current record from the start
		 of input.  Inside a BEGIN action the value shall be
		 zero. Inside an END action the value shall be the
		 number of the last record processed.

       OFMT	 The printf format for converting numbers to strings in
		 output statements (see Output Statements); "%.6g" by
		 default. The result of the conversion is unspecified if
		 the value of OFMT is not a floating-point format
		 specification.

       OFS	 The print statement output field separator; <space> by
		 default.

       ORS	 The print statement output record separator; a
		 <newline> by default.

       RLENGTH	 The length of the string matched by the match function.

       RS	 The first character of the string value of RS shall be
		 the input record separator; a <newline> by default. If
		 RS contains more than one character, the results are
		 unspecified. If RS is null, then records are separated
		 by sequences consisting of a <newline> plus one or more
		 blank lines, leading or trailing blank lines shall not
		 result in empty records at the beginning or end of the
		 input, and a <newline> shall always be a field
		 separator, no matter what the value of FS is.

       RSTART	 The starting position of the string matched by the
		 match function, numbering from 1. This shall always be
		 equivalent to the return value of the match function.

       SUBSEP	 The subscript separator string for multi-dimensional
		 arrays; the default value is implementation-defined.

   Regular Expressions
       The awk utility shall make use of the extended regular expression
       notation (see the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017,
       Section 9.4, Extended Regular Expressions) except that it shall
       allow the use of C-language conventions for escaping special
       characters within the EREs, as specified in the table in the Base
       Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Chapter 5, File Format
       Notation ('\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v') and the
       following table; these escape sequences shall be recognized both
       inside and outside bracket expressions. Note that records need
       not be separated by <newline> characters and string constants can
       contain <newline> characters, so even the "\n" sequence is valid
       in awk EREs. Using a <slash> character within an ERE requires the
       escaping shown in the following table.

		      Table 4-2: Escape Sequences in awk

+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
| Escape  |				       |				    |
|Sequence |	       Description	       |	      Meaning		    |
+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
|\"	  | <backslash> <quotation-mark>       | <quotation-mark> character	    |
+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
|\/	  | <backslash> <slash>		       | <slash> character		    |
+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
|\ddd	  | A <backslash> character followed   | The character whose encoding is    |
|	  | by the longest sequence of one,    | represented by the one, two, or    |
|	  | two, or three octal-digit	       | three-digit octal integer.	    |
|	  | characters (01234567). If all of   | Multi-byte characters require	    |
|	  | the digits are 0 (that is,	       | multiple, concatenated escape	    |
|	  | representation of the NUL	       | sequences of this type, including  |
|	  | character), the behavior is	       | the leading <backslash> for each   |
|	  | undefined.			       | byte.				    |
+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
|\c	  | A <backslash> character followed   | Undefined			    |
|	  | by any character not described in  |				    |
|	  | this table or in the table in the  |				    |
|	  | Base Definitions volume of	       |				    |
|	  | POSIX.1-2017, "Chapter 5" ", "     |				    |
|	  | "File Format Notation" ( '\\' ,    |				    |
|	  | '\a' , '\b' , '\f' , '\n' , '\r' , |				    |
|	  | '\t' , '\v' ).		       |				    |
+---------+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
       A regular expression can be matched against a specific field or
       string by using one of the two regular expression matching
       operators, '~' and "!~".	 These operators shall interpret their
       right-hand operand as a regular expression and their left-hand
       operand as a string. If the regular expression matches the
       string, the '~' expression shall evaluate to a value of 1, and
       the "!~" expression shall evaluate to a value of 0. (The regular
       expression matching operation is as defined by the term matched
       in the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Section 9.1,
       Regular Expression Definitions, where a match occurs on any part
       of the string unless the regular expression is limited with the
       <circumflex> or <dollar-sign> special characters.) If the regular
       expression does not match the string, the '~' expression shall
       evaluate to a value of 0, and the "!~" expression shall evaluate
       to a value of 1. If the right-hand operand is any expression
       other than the lexical token ERE, the string value of the
       expression shall be interpreted as an extended regular
       expression, including the escape conventions described above.
       Note that these same escape conventions shall also be applied in
       determining the value of a string literal (the lexical token
       STRING), and thus shall be applied a second time when a string
       literal is used in this context.

       When an ERE token appears as an expression in any context other
       than as the right-hand of the '~' or "!~" operator or as one of
       the built-in function arguments described below, the value of the
       resulting expression shall be the equivalent of:


	   $0 ~ /ere/

       The ere argument to the gsub, match, sub functions, and the fs
       argument to the split function (see String Functions) shall be
       interpreted as extended regular expressions. These can be either
       ERE tokens or arbitrary expressions, and shall be interpreted in
       the same manner as the right-hand side of the '~' or "!~"
       operator.

       An extended regular expression can be used to separate fields by
       assigning a string containing the expression to the built-in
       variable FS, either directly or as a consequence of using the -F
       sepstring option.  The default value of the FS variable shall be
       a single <space>.  The following describes FS behavior:

	1. If FS is a null string, the behavior is unspecified.

	2. If FS is a single character:

	    a. If FS is <space>, skip leading and trailing <blank> and
	       <newline> characters; fields shall be delimited by sets
	       of one or more <blank> or <newline> characters.

	    b. Otherwise, if FS is any other character c, fields shall
	       be delimited by each single occurrence of c.

	3. Otherwise, the string value of FS shall be considered to be
	   an extended regular expression. Each occurrence of a sequence
	   matching the extended regular expression shall delimit
	   fields.

       Except for the '~' and "!~" operators, and in the gsub, match,
       split, and sub built-in functions, ERE matching shall be based on
       input records; that is, record separator characters (the first
       character of the value of the variable RS, <newline> by default)
       cannot be embedded in the expression, and no expression shall
       match the record separator character. If the record separator is
       not <newline>, <newline> characters embedded in the expression
       can be matched. For the '~' and "!~" operators, and in those four
       built-in functions, ERE matching shall be based on text strings;
       that is, any character (including <newline> and the record
       separator) can be embedded in the pattern, and an appropriate
       pattern shall match any character. However, in all awk ERE
       matching, the use of one or more NUL characters in the pattern,
       input record, or text string produces undefined results.

   Patterns
       A pattern is any valid expression, a range specified by two
       expressions separated by a comma, or one of the two special
       patterns BEGIN or END.

   Special Patterns
       The awk utility shall recognize two special patterns, BEGIN and
       END.  Each BEGIN pattern shall be matched once and its associated
       action executed before the first record of input is read--except
       possibly by use of the getline function (see Input/Output and
       General Functions) in a prior BEGIN action--and before command
       line assignment is done. Each END pattern shall be matched once
       and its associated action executed after the last record of input
       has been read. These two patterns shall have associated actions.

       BEGIN and END shall not combine with other patterns. Multiple
       BEGIN and END patterns shall be allowed. The actions associated
       with the BEGIN patterns shall be executed in the order specified
       in the program, as are the END actions. An END pattern can
       precede a BEGIN pattern in a program.

       If an awk program consists of only actions with the pattern
       BEGIN, and the BEGIN action contains no getline function, awk
       shall exit without reading its input when the last statement in
       the last BEGIN action is executed. If an awk program consists of
       only actions with the pattern END or only actions with the
       patterns BEGIN and END, the input shall be read before the
       statements in the END actions are executed.

   Expression Patterns
       An expression pattern shall be evaluated as if it were an
       expression in a Boolean context. If the result is true, the
       pattern shall be considered to match, and the associated action
       (if any) shall be executed. If the result is false, the action
       shall not be executed.

   Pattern Ranges
       A pattern range consists of two expressions separated by a comma;
       in this case, the action shall be performed for all records
       between a match of the first expression and the following match
       of the second expression, inclusive. At this point, the pattern
       range can be repeated starting at input records subsequent to the
       end of the matched range.

   Actions
       An action is a sequence of statements as shown in the grammar in
       Grammar.	 Any single statement can be replaced by a statement
       list enclosed in curly braces. The application shall ensure that
       statements in a statement list are separated by <newline> or
       <semicolon> characters. Statements in a statement list shall be
       executed sequentially in the order that they appear.

       The expression acting as the conditional in an if statement shall
       be evaluated and if it is non-zero or non-null, the following
       statement shall be executed; otherwise, if else is present, the
       statement following the else shall be executed.

       The if, while, do...while, for, break, and continue statements
       are based on the ISO C standard (see Section 1.1.2, Concepts
       Derived from the ISO C Standard), except that the Boolean
       expressions shall be treated as described in Expressions in awk,
       and except in the case of:


	   for (variable in array)

       which shall iterate, assigning each index of array to variable in
       an unspecified order. The results of adding new elements to array
       within such a for loop are undefined. If a break or continue
       statement occurs outside of a loop, the behavior is undefined.

       The delete statement shall remove an individual array element.
       Thus, the following code deletes an entire array:


	   for (index in array)
	       delete array[index]

       The next statement shall cause all further processing of the
       current input record to be abandoned. The behavior is undefined
       if a next statement appears or is invoked in a BEGIN or END
       action.

       The exit statement shall invoke all END actions in the order in
       which they occur in the program source and then terminate the
       program without reading further input. An exit statement inside
       an END action shall terminate the program without further
       execution of END actions. If an expression is specified in an
       exit statement, its numeric value shall be the exit status of
       awk, unless subsequent errors are encountered or a subsequent
       exit statement with an expression is executed.

   Output Statements
       Both print and printf statements shall write to standard output
       by default. The output shall be written to the location specified
       by output_redirection if one is supplied, as follows:


	   > expression
	   >> expression
	   | expression

       In all cases, the expression shall be evaluated to produce a
       string that is used as a pathname into which to write (for '>' or
       ">>") or as a command to be executed (for '|').	Using the first
       two forms, if the file of that name is not currently open, it
       shall be opened, creating it if necessary and using the first
       form, truncating the file. The output then shall be appended to
       the file. As long as the file remains open, subsequent calls in
       which expression evaluates to the same string value shall simply
       append output to the file. The file remains open until the close
       function (see Input/Output and General Functions) is called with
       an expression that evaluates to the same string value.

       The third form shall write output onto a stream piped to the
       input of a command. The stream shall be created if no stream is
       currently open with the value of expression as its command name.
       The stream created shall be equivalent to one created by a call
       to the popen() function defined in the System Interfaces volume
       of POSIX.1-2017 with the value of expression as the command
       argument and a value of w as the mode argument. As long as the
       stream remains open, subsequent calls in which expression
       evaluates to the same string value shall write output to the
       existing stream. The stream shall remain open until the close
       function (see Input/Output and General Functions) is called with
       an expression that evaluates to the same string value.  At that
       time, the stream shall be closed as if by a call to the pclose()
       function defined in the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1-2017.

       As described in detail by the grammar in Grammar, these output
       statements shall take a <comma>-separated list of expressions
       referred to in the grammar by the non-terminal symbols expr_list,
       print_expr_list, or print_expr_list_opt.	 This list is referred
       to here as the expression list, and each member is referred to as
       an expression argument.

       The print statement shall write the value of each expression
       argument onto the indicated output stream separated by the
       current output field separator (see variable OFS above), and
       terminated by the output record separator (see variable ORS
       above). All expression arguments shall be taken as strings, being
       converted if necessary; this conversion shall be as described in
       Expressions in awk, with the exception that the printf format in
       OFMT shall be used instead of the value in CONVFMT.  An empty
       expression list shall stand for the whole input record ($0).

       The printf statement shall produce output based on a notation
       similar to the File Format Notation used to describe file formats
       in this volume of POSIX.1-2017 (see the Base Definitions volume
       of POSIX.1-2017, Chapter 5, File Format Notation).  Output shall
       be produced as specified with the first expression argument as
       the string format and subsequent expression arguments as the
       strings arg1 to argn, inclusive, with the following exceptions:

	1. The format shall be an actual character string rather than a
	   graphical representation. Therefore, it cannot contain empty
	   character positions. The <space> in the format string, in any
	   context other than a flag of a conversion specification,
	   shall be treated as an ordinary character that is copied to
	   the output.

	2. If the character set contains a '' character and that
	   character appears in the format string, it shall be treated
	   as an ordinary character that is copied to the output.

	3. The escape sequences beginning with a <backslash> character
	   shall be treated as sequences of ordinary characters that are
	   copied to the output. Note that these same sequences shall be
	   interpreted lexically by awk when they appear in literal
	   strings, but they shall not be treated specially by the
	   printf statement.

	4. A field width or precision can be specified as the '*'
	   character instead of a digit string. In this case the next
	   argument from the expression list shall be fetched and its
	   numeric value taken as the field width or precision.

	5. The implementation shall not precede or follow output from
	   the d or u conversion specifier characters with <blank>
	   characters not specified by the format string.

	6. The implementation shall not precede output from the o
	   conversion specifier character with leading zeros not
	   specified by the format string.

	7. For the c conversion specifier character: if the argument has
	   a numeric value, the character whose encoding is that value
	   shall be output. If the value is zero or is not the encoding
	   of any character in the character set, the behavior is
	   undefined. If the argument does not have a numeric value, the
	   first character of the string value shall be output; if the
	   string does not contain any characters, the behavior is
	   undefined.

	8. For each conversion specification that consumes an argument,
	   the next expression argument shall be evaluated. With the
	   exception of the c conversion specifier character, the value
	   shall be converted (according to the rules specified in
	   Expressions in awk) to the appropriate type for the
	   conversion specification.

	9. If there are insufficient expression arguments to satisfy all
	   the conversion specifications in the format string, the
	   behavior is undefined.

       10. If any character sequence in the format string begins with a
	   '%' character, but does not form a valid conversion
	   specification, the behavior is unspecified.

       Both print and printf can output at least {LINE_MAX} bytes.

   Functions
       The awk language has a variety of built-in functions: arithmetic,
       string, input/output, and general.

   Arithmetic Functions
       The arithmetic functions, except for int, shall be based on the
       ISO C standard (see Section 1.1.2, Concepts Derived from the ISO
       C Standard).  The behavior is undefined in cases where the ISO C
       standard specifies that an error be returned or that the behavior
       is undefined. Although the grammar (see Grammar) permits built-in
       functions to appear with no arguments or parentheses, unless the
       argument or parentheses are indicated as optional in the
       following list (by displaying them within the "[]" brackets),
       such use is undefined.

       atan2(y,x)
		 Return arctangent of y/x in radians in the range
		 [-<pi>,<pi>].

       cos(x)	 Return cosine of x, where x is in radians.

       sin(x)	 Return sine of x, where x is in radians.

       exp(x)	 Return the exponential function of x.

       log(x)	 Return the natural logarithm of x.

       sqrt(x)	 Return the square root of x.

       int(x)	 Return the argument truncated to an integer. Truncation
		 shall be toward 0 when x>0.

       rand()	 Return a random number n, such that 0<=n<1.

       srand([expr])
		 Set the seed value for rand to expr or use the time of
		 day if expr is omitted. The previous seed value shall
		 be returned.

   String Functions
       The string functions in the following list shall be supported.
       Although the grammar (see Grammar) permits built-in functions to
       appear with no arguments or parentheses, unless the argument or
       parentheses are indicated as optional in the following list (by
       displaying them within the "[]" brackets), such use is undefined.

       gsub(ere, repl[, in])
		 Behave like sub (see below), except that it shall
		 replace all occurrences of the regular expression (like
		 the ed utility global substitute) in $0 or in the in
		 argument, when specified.

       index(s, t)
		 Return the position, in characters, numbering from 1,
		 in string s where string t first occurs, or zero if it
		 does not occur at all.

       length[([s])]
		 Return the length, in characters, of its argument taken
		 as a string, or of the whole record, $0, if there is no
		 argument.

       match(s, ere)
		 Return the position, in characters, numbering from 1,
		 in string s where the extended regular expression ere
		 occurs, or zero if it does not occur at all. RSTART
		 shall be set to the starting position (which is the
		 same as the returned value), zero if no match is found;
		 RLENGTH shall be set to the length of the matched
		 string, -1 if no match is found.

       split(s, a[, fs ])
		 Split the string s into array elements a[1], a[2], ...,
		 a[n], and return n.  All elements of the array shall be
		 deleted before the split is performed. The separation
		 shall be done with the ERE fs or with the field
		 separator FS if fs is not given. Each array element
		 shall have a string value when created and, if
		 appropriate, the array element shall be considered a
		 numeric string (see Expressions in awk).  The effect of
		 a null string as the value of fs is unspecified.

       sprintf(fmt, expr, expr, ...)
		 Format the expressions according to the printf format
		 given by fmt and return the resulting string.

       sub(ere, repl[, in ])
		 Substitute the string repl in place of the first
		 instance of the extended regular expression ERE in
		 string in and return the number of substitutions. An
		 <ampersand> ('&') appearing in the string repl shall be
		 replaced by the string from in that matches the ERE. An
		 <ampersand> preceded with a <backslash> shall be
		 interpreted as the literal <ampersand> character. An
		 occurrence of two consecutive <backslash> characters
		 shall be interpreted as just a single literal
		 <backslash> character. Any other occurrence of a
		 <backslash> (for example, preceding any other
		 character) shall be treated as a literal <backslash>
		 character. Note that if repl is a string literal (the
		 lexical token STRING; see Grammar), the handling of the
		 <ampersand> character occurs after any lexical
		 processing, including any lexical <backslash>-escape
		 sequence processing. If in is specified and it is not
		 an lvalue (see Expressions in awk), the behavior is
		 undefined. If in is omitted, awk shall use the current
		 record ($0) in its place.

       substr(s, m[, n ])
		 Return the at most n-character substring of s that
		 begins at position m, numbering from 1. If n is
		 omitted, or if n specifies more characters than are
		 left in the string, the length of the substring shall
		 be limited by the length of the string s.

       tolower(s)
		 Return a string based on the string s.	 Each character
		 in s that is an uppercase letter specified to have a
		 tolower mapping by the LC_CTYPE category of the current
		 locale shall be replaced in the returned string by the
		 lowercase letter specified by the mapping. Other
		 characters in s shall be unchanged in the returned
		 string.

       toupper(s)
		 Return a string based on the string s.	 Each character
		 in s that is a lowercase letter specified to have a
		 toupper mapping by the LC_CTYPE category of the current
		 locale is replaced in the returned string by the
		 uppercase letter specified by the mapping. Other
		 characters in s are unchanged in the returned string.

       All of the preceding functions that take ERE as a parameter
       expect a pattern or a string valued expression that is a regular
       expression as defined in Regular Expressions.

   Input/Output and General Functions
       The input/output and general functions are:

       close(expression)
		 Close the file or pipe opened by a print or printf
		 statement or a call to getline with the same string-
		 valued expression.  The limit on the number of open
		 expression arguments is implementation-defined. If the
		 close was successful, the function shall return zero;
		 otherwise, it shall return non-zero.

       expression | getline [var]
		 Read a record of input from a stream piped from the
		 output of a command. The stream shall be created if no
		 stream is currently open with the value of expression
		 as its command name. The stream created shall be
		 equivalent to one created by a call to the popen()
		 function with the value of expression as the command
		 argument and a value of r as the mode argument. As long
		 as the stream remains open, subsequent calls in which
		 expression evaluates to the same string value shall
		 read subsequent records from the stream. The stream
		 shall remain open until the close function is called
		 with an expression that evaluates to the same string
		 value. At that time, the stream shall be closed as if
		 by a call to the pclose() function. If var is omitted,
		 $0 and NF shall be set; otherwise, var shall be set
		 and, if appropriate, it shall be considered a numeric
		 string (see Expressions in awk).

		 The getline operator can form ambiguous constructs when
		 there are unparenthesized operators (including
		 concatenate) to the left of the '|' (to the beginning
		 of the expression containing getline).	 In the context
		 of the '


 operator, '|' shall behave as if it had a
		 lower precedence than '


.  The result of evaluating
		 other operators is unspecified, and conforming
		 applications shall parenthesize properly all such
		 usages.

       getline	 Set $0 to the next input record from the current input
		 file. This form of getline shall set the NF, NR, and
		 FNR variables.

       getline var
		 Set variable var to the next input record from the
		 current input file and, if appropriate, var shall be
		 considered a numeric string (see Expressions in awk).
		 This form of getline shall set the FNR and NR
		 variables.

       getline [var] < expression
		 Read the next record of input from a named file. The
		 expression shall be evaluated to produce a string that
		 is used as a pathname.	 If the file of that name is not
		 currently open, it shall be opened. As long as the
		 stream remains open, subsequent calls in which
		 expression evaluates to the same string value shall
		 read subsequent records from the file. The file shall
		 remain open until the close function is called with an
		 expression that evaluates to the same string value. If
		 var is omitted, $0 and NF shall be set; otherwise, var
		 shall be set and, if appropriate, it shall be
		 considered a numeric string (see Expressions in awk).

		 The getline operator can form ambiguous constructs when
		 there are unparenthesized binary operators (including
		 concatenate) to the right of the '<' (up to the end of
		 the expression containing the getline).  The result of
		 evaluating such a construct is unspecified, and
		 conforming applications shall parenthesize properly all
		 such usages.

       system(expression)
		 Execute the command given by expression in a manner
		 equivalent to the system() function defined in the
		 System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1-2017 and return the
		 exit status of the command.

       All forms of getline shall return 1 for successful input, zero
       for end-of-file, and -1 for an error.

       Where strings are used as the name of a file or pipeline, the
       application shall ensure that the strings are textually
       identical. The terminology ``same string value'' implies that
       ``equivalent strings'', even those that differ only by <space>
       characters, represent different files.

   User-Defined Functions
       The awk language also provides user-defined functions. Such
       functions can be defined as:


	   function name([parameter, ...]) { statements }

       A function can be referred to anywhere in an awk program; in
       particular, its use can precede its definition. The scope of a
       function is global.

       Function parameters, if present, can be either scalars or arrays;
       the behavior is undefined if an array name is passed as a
       parameter that the function uses as a scalar, or if a scalar
       expression is passed as a parameter that the function uses as an
       array. Function parameters shall be passed by value if scalar and
       by reference if array name.

       The number of parameters in the function definition need not
       match the number of parameters in the function call. Excess
       formal parameters can be used as local variables. If fewer
       arguments are supplied in a function call than are in the
       function definition, the extra parameters that are used in the
       function body as scalars shall evaluate to the uninitialized
       value until they are otherwise initialized, and the extra
       parameters that are used in the function body as arrays shall be
       treated as uninitialized arrays where each element evaluates to
       the uninitialized value until otherwise initialized.

       When invoking a function, no white space can be placed between
       the function name and the opening parenthesis. Function calls can
       be nested and recursive calls can be made upon functions. Upon
       return from any nested or recursive function call, the values of
       all of the calling function's parameters shall be unchanged,
       except for array parameters passed by reference. The return
       statement can be used to return a value. If a return statement
       appears outside of a function definition, the behavior is
       undefined.

       In the function definition, <newline> characters shall be
       optional before the opening brace and after the closing brace.
       Function definitions can appear anywhere in the program where a
       pattern-action pair is allowed.

   Grammar
       The grammar in this section and the lexical conventions in the
       following section shall together describe the syntax for awk
       programs. The general conventions for this style of grammar are
       described in Section 1.3, Grammar Conventions.  A valid program
       can be represented as the non-terminal symbol program in the
       grammar. This formal syntax shall take precedence over the
       preceding text syntax description.


	   %token NAME NUMBER STRING ERE
	   %token FUNC_NAME   /* Name followed by '(' without white space. */

	   /* Keywords */
	   %token	Begin	End
	   /*	       'BEGIN' 'END'				*/

	   %token	Break	Continue   Delete   Do	 Else
	   /*	       'break' 'continue' 'delete' 'do' 'else'	*/

	   %token	Exit   For   Function	If   In
	   /*	       'exit' 'for' 'function' 'if' 'in'	*/

	   %token	Next   Print   Printf	Return	 While
	   /*	       'next' 'print' 'printf' 'return' 'while' */

	   /* Reserved function names */
	   %token BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME
		       /* One token for the following:
			* atan2 cos sin exp log sqrt int rand srand
			* gsub index length match split sprintf sub
			* substr tolower toupper close system
			*/
	   %token GETLINE
		       /* Syntactically different from other built-ins. */

	   /* Two-character tokens. */
	   %token ADD_ASSIGN SUB_ASSIGN MUL_ASSIGN DIV_ASSIGN MOD_ASSIGN POW_ASSIGN
	   /*	  '+='	     '-='	'*='	   '/='	      '%='	 '^=' */

	   %token OR   AND  NO_MATCH   EQ   LE	 GE   NE   INCR	 DECR  APPEND
	   /*	  '||' '&&' '!~' '==' '<=' '>=' '!=' '++'  '--'	 '>>'	*/

	   /* One-character tokens. */
	   %token '{' '}' '(' ')' '[' ']' ',' ';' NEWLINE
	   %token '+' '-' '*' '%' '^' '!' '>' '<' '|' '?' ':' '~' '


 '='

	   %start program
	   %%

	   program	    : item_list
			    | item_list item
			    ;

	   item_list	    : /* empty */
			    | item_list item terminator
			    ;

	   item		    : action
			    | pattern action
			    | normal_pattern
			    | Function NAME	 '(' param_list_opt ')'
				  newline_opt action
			    | Function FUNC_NAME '(' param_list_opt ')'
				  newline_opt action
			    ;

	   param_list_opt   : /* empty */
			    | param_list
			    ;

	   param_list	    : NAME
			    | param_list ',' NAME
			    ;

	   pattern	    : normal_pattern
			    | special_pattern
			    ;

	   normal_pattern   : expr
			    | expr ',' newline_opt expr
			    ;

	   special_pattern  : Begin
			    | End
			    ;

	   action	    : '{' newline_opt				  '}'
			    | '{' newline_opt terminated_statement_list	  '}'
			    | '{' newline_opt unterminated_statement_list '}'
			    ;

	   terminator	    : terminator NEWLINE
			    |		 ';'
			    |		 NEWLINE
			    ;

	   terminated_statement_list : terminated_statement
			    | terminated_statement_list terminated_statement
			    ;

	   unterminated_statement_list : unterminated_statement
			    | terminated_statement_list unterminated_statement
			    ;

	   terminated_statement : action newline_opt
			    | If '(' expr ')' newline_opt terminated_statement
			    | If '(' expr ')' newline_opt terminated_statement
				  Else newline_opt terminated_statement
			    | While '(' expr ')' newline_opt terminated_statement
			    | For '(' simple_statement_opt ';'
				 expr_opt ';' simple_statement_opt ')' newline_opt
				 terminated_statement
			    | For '(' NAME In NAME ')' newline_opt
				 terminated_statement
			    | ';' newline_opt
			    | terminatable_statement NEWLINE newline_opt
			    | terminatable_statement ';'     newline_opt
			    ;

	   unterminated_statement : terminatable_statement
			    | If '(' expr ')' newline_opt unterminated_statement
			    | If '(' expr ')' newline_opt terminated_statement
				 Else newline_opt unterminated_statement
			    | While '(' expr ')' newline_opt unterminated_statement
			    | For '(' simple_statement_opt ';'
			     expr_opt ';' simple_statement_opt ')' newline_opt
				 unterminated_statement
			    | For '(' NAME In NAME ')' newline_opt
				 unterminated_statement
			    ;

	   terminatable_statement : simple_statement
			    | Break
			    | Continue
			    | Next
			    | Exit expr_opt
			    | Return expr_opt
			    | Do newline_opt terminated_statement While '(' expr ')'
			    ;

	   simple_statement_opt : /* empty */
			    | simple_statement
			    ;

	   simple_statement : Delete NAME '[' expr_list ']'
			    | expr
			    | print_statement
			    ;

	   print_statement  : simple_print_statement
			    | simple_print_statement output_redirection
			    ;

	   simple_print_statement : Print  print_expr_list_opt
			    | Print  '(' multiple_expr_list ')'
			    | Printf print_expr_list
			    | Printf '(' multiple_expr_list ')'
			    ;

	   output_redirection : '>'    expr
			    | APPEND expr
			    | '|'    expr
			    ;

	   expr_list_opt    : /* empty */
			    | expr_list
			    ;

	   expr_list	    : expr
			    | multiple_expr_list
			    ;

	   multiple_expr_list : expr ',' newline_opt expr
			    | multiple_expr_list ',' newline_opt expr
			    ;

	   expr_opt	    : /* empty */
			    | expr
			    ;

	   expr		    : unary_expr
			    | non_unary_expr
			    ;

	   unary_expr	    : '+' expr
			    | '-' expr
			    | unary_expr '^'	  expr
			    | unary_expr '*'	  expr
			    | unary_expr '/'	  expr
			    | unary_expr '%'	  expr
			    | unary_expr '+'	  expr
			    | unary_expr '-'	  expr
			    | unary_expr	  non_unary_expr
			    | unary_expr '<'	  expr
			    | unary_expr LE	  expr
			    | unary_expr NE	  expr
			    | unary_expr EQ	  expr
			    | unary_expr '>'	  expr
			    | unary_expr GE	  expr
			    | unary_expr '~'	  expr
			    | unary_expr NO_MATCH expr
			    | unary_expr In NAME
			    | unary_expr AND newline_opt expr
			    | unary_expr OR  newline_opt expr
			    | unary_expr '?' expr ':' expr
			    | unary_input_function
			    ;

	   non_unary_expr   : '(' expr ')'
			    | '!' expr
			    | non_unary_expr '^'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '*'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '/'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '%'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '+'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '-'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr	      non_unary_expr
			    | non_unary_expr '<'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr LE	      expr
			    | non_unary_expr NE	      expr
			    | non_unary_expr EQ	      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '>'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr GE	      expr
			    | non_unary_expr '~'      expr
			    | non_unary_expr NO_MATCH expr
			    | non_unary_expr In NAME
			    | '(' multiple_expr_list ')' In NAME
			    | non_unary_expr AND newline_opt expr
			    | non_unary_expr OR	 newline_opt expr
			    | non_unary_expr '?' expr ':' expr
			    | NUMBER
			    | STRING
			    | lvalue
			    | ERE
			    | lvalue INCR
			    | lvalue DECR
			    | INCR lvalue
			    | DECR lvalue
			    | lvalue POW_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue MOD_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue MUL_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue DIV_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue ADD_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue SUB_ASSIGN expr
			    | lvalue '=' expr
			    | FUNC_NAME '(' expr_list_opt ')'
				 /* no white space allowed before '(' */
			    | BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME '(' expr_list_opt ')'
			    | BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME
			    | non_unary_input_function
			    ;

	   print_expr_list_opt : /* empty */
			    | print_expr_list
			    ;

	   print_expr_list  : print_expr
			    | print_expr_list ',' newline_opt print_expr
			    ;

	   print_expr	    : unary_print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr
			    ;

	   unary_print_expr : '+' print_expr
			    | '-' print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '^'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '*'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '/'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '%'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '+'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '-'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr		non_unary_print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '~'	print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr NO_MATCH print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr In NAME
			    | unary_print_expr AND newline_opt print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr OR  newline_opt print_expr
			    | unary_print_expr '?' print_expr ':' print_expr
			    ;

	   non_unary_print_expr : '(' expr ')'
			    | '!' print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '^'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '*'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '/'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '%'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '+'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '-'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr	    non_unary_print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '~'	    print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr NO_MATCH print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr In NAME
			    | '(' multiple_expr_list ')' In NAME
			    | non_unary_print_expr AND newline_opt print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr OR  newline_opt print_expr
			    | non_unary_print_expr '?' print_expr ':' print_expr
			    | NUMBER
			    | STRING
			    | lvalue
			    | ERE
			    | lvalue INCR
			    | lvalue DECR
			    | INCR lvalue
			    | DECR lvalue
			    | lvalue POW_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue MOD_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue MUL_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue DIV_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue ADD_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue SUB_ASSIGN print_expr
			    | lvalue '=' print_expr
			    | FUNC_NAME '(' expr_list_opt ')'
				/* no white space allowed before '(' */
			    | BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME '(' expr_list_opt ')'
			    | BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME
			    ;

	   lvalue	    : NAME
			    | NAME '[' expr_list ']'
			    | '


 expr
			    ;

	   non_unary_input_function : simple_get
			    | simple_get '<' expr
			    | non_unary_expr '|' simple_get
			    ;

	   unary_input_function : unary_expr '|' simple_get
			    ;

	   simple_get	    : GETLINE
			    | GETLINE lvalue
			    ;

	   newline_opt	    : /* empty */
			    | newline_opt NEWLINE
			    ;

       This grammar has several ambiguities that shall be resolved as
       follows:

	*  Operator precedence and associativity shall be as described
	   in Table 4-1, Expressions in Decreasing Precedence in awk.

	*  In case of ambiguity, an else shall be associated with the
	   most immediately preceding if that would satisfy the grammar.

	*  In some contexts, a <slash> ('/') that is used to surround an
	   ERE could also be the division operator.  This shall be
	   resolved in such a way that wherever the division operator
	   could appear, a <slash> is assumed to be the division
	   operator. (There is no unary division operator.)

       Each expression in an awk program shall conform to the precedence
       and associativity rules, even when this is not needed to resolve
       an ambiguity. For example, because '


 has higher precedence than
       '++', the string "$x++--" is not a valid awk expression, even
       though it is unambiguously parsed by the grammar as "$(x++)--".

       One convention that might not be obvious from the formal grammar
       is where <newline> characters are acceptable. There are several
       obvious placements such as terminating a statement, and a
       <backslash> can be used to escape <newline> characters between
       any lexical tokens. In addition, <newline> characters without
       <backslash> characters can follow a comma, an open brace, logical
       AND operator ("&&"), logical OR operator ("||"), the do keyword,
       the else keyword, and the closing parenthesis of an if, for, or
       while statement. For example:


	   { print  $1,
		    $2 }

   Lexical Conventions
       The lexical conventions for awk programs, with respect to the
       preceding grammar, shall be as follows:

	1. Except as noted, awk shall recognize the longest possible
	   token or delimiter beginning at a given point.

	2. A comment shall consist of any characters beginning with the
	   <number-sign> character and terminated by, but excluding the
	   next occurrence of, a <newline>.  Comments shall have no
	   effect, except to delimit lexical tokens.

	3. The <newline> shall be recognized as the token NEWLINE.

	4. A <backslash> character immediately followed by a <newline>
	   shall have no effect.

	5. The token STRING shall represent a string constant. A string
	   constant shall begin with the character '"'.	 Within a string
	   constant, a <backslash> character shall be considered to
	   begin an escape sequence as specified in the table in the
	   Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Chapter 5, File
	   Format Notation ('\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t',
	   '\v').  In addition, the escape sequences in Table 4-2,
	   Escape Sequences in awk shall be recognized. A <newline>
	   shall not occur within a string constant. A string constant
	   shall be terminated by the first unescaped occurrence of the
	   character '"' after the one that begins the string constant.
	   The value of the string shall be the sequence of all
	   unescaped characters and values of escape sequences between,
	   but not including, the two delimiting '"' characters.

	6. The token ERE represents an extended regular expression
	   constant. An ERE constant shall begin with the <slash>
	   character. Within an ERE constant, a <backslash> character
	   shall be considered to begin an escape sequence as specified
	   in the table in the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017,
	   Chapter 5, File Format Notation.  In addition, the escape
	   sequences in Table 4-2, Escape Sequences in awk shall be
	   recognized. The application shall ensure that a <newline>
	   does not occur within an ERE constant. An ERE constant shall
	   be terminated by the first unescaped occurrence of the
	   <slash> character after the one that begins the ERE constant.
	   The extended regular expression represented by the ERE
	   constant shall be the sequence of all unescaped characters
	   and values of escape sequences between, but not including,
	   the two delimiting <slash> characters.

	7. A <blank> shall have no effect, except to delimit lexical
	   tokens or within STRING or ERE tokens.

	8. The token NUMBER shall represent a numeric constant. Its form
	   and numeric value shall either be equivalent to the
	   decimal-floating-constant token as specified by the ISO C
	   standard, or it shall be a sequence of decimal digits and
	   shall be evaluated as an integer constant in decimal. In
	   addition, implementations may accept numeric constants with
	   the form and numeric value equivalent to the
	   hexadecimal-constant and hexadecimal-floating-constant tokens
	   as specified by the ISO C standard.

	   If the value is too large or too small to be representable
	   (see Section 1.1.2, Concepts Derived from the ISO C
	   Standard), the behavior is undefined.

	9. A sequence of underscores, digits, and alphabetics from the
	   portable character set (see the Base Definitions volume of
	   POSIX.1-2017, Section 6.1, Portable Character Set), beginning
	   with an <underscore> or alphabetic character, shall be
	   considered a word.

       10. The following words are keywords that shall be recognized as
	   individual tokens; the name of the token is the same as the
	   keyword:

	   BEGIN	delete do    END exit	  function     in next	    printf
	   break	else	     for	  getline if   print	    return
	   continue							    while

       11. The following words are names of built-in functions and shall be
	   recognized as the token
	   BUILTIN_FUNC_NAME:

	   atan2	gsub index   log match	  split	       sub substr   toupper
	   close cos	int length   rand sin	  sprintf      system
	   exp					  sqrt srand   tolower

	   The above-listed keywords and names of built-in functions are
	   considered reserved words.

       12. The token NAME shall consist of a word that is not a keyword
	   or a name of a built-in function and is not followed
	   immediately (without any delimiters) by the '(' character.

       13. The token FUNC_NAME shall consist of a word that is not a
	   keyword or a name of a built-in function, followed
	   immediately (without any delimiters) by the '(' character.
	   The '(' character shall not be included as part of the token.

       14. The following two-character sequences shall be recognized as
	   the named tokens:

		  +-----------+----------+------------+----------+
		  |Token Name | Sequence | Token Name | Sequence |
		  +-----------+----------+------------+----------+
		  |ADD_ASSIGN |	   +=	 | NO_MATCH   |	   !~	 |
		  |SUB_ASSIGN |	   -=	 | EQ	      |	   ==	 |
		  |MUL_ASSIGN |	   *=	 | LE	      |	   <=	 |
		  |DIV_ASSIGN |	   /=	 | GE	      |	   >=	 |
		  |MOD_ASSIGN |	   %=	 | NE	      |	   !=	 |
		  |POW_ASSIGN |	   ^=	 | INCR	      |	   ++	 |
		  |OR	      |	   ||	 | DECR	      |	   --	 |
		  |AND	      |	   &&	 | APPEND     |	   >>	 |
		  +-----------+----------+------------+----------+
       15. The following single characters shall be recognized as tokens
	   whose names are the character:


	       <newline> { } ( ) [ ] , ; + - * % ^ ! > < | ? : ~ $ =

       There is a lexical ambiguity between the token ERE and the tokens
       '/' and DIV_ASSIGN.  When an input sequence begins with a <slash>
       character in any syntactic context where the token '/' or
       DIV_ASSIGN could appear as the next token in a valid program, the
       longer of those two tokens that can be recognized shall be
       recognized. In any other syntactic context where the token ERE
       could appear as the next token in a valid program, the token ERE
       shall be recognized.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:

	0    All input files were processed successfully.

       >0    An error occurred.

       The exit status can be altered within the program by using an
       exit expression.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       If any file operand is specified and the named file cannot be
       accessed, awk shall write a diagnostic message to standard error
       and terminate without any further action.

       If the program specified by either the program operand or a
       progfile operand is not a valid awk program (as specified in the
       EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section), the behavior is undefined.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE
       The index, length, match, and substr functions should not be
       confused with similar functions in the ISO C standard; the awk
       versions deal with characters, while the ISO C standard deals
       with bytes.

       Because the concatenation operation is represented by adjacent
       expressions rather than an explicit operator, it is often
       necessary to use parentheses to enforce the proper evaluation
       precedence.

       When using awk to process pathnames, it is recommended that
       LC_ALL, or at least LC_CTYPE and LC_COLLATE, are set to POSIX or
       C in the environment, since pathnames can contain byte sequences
       that do not form valid characters in some locales, in which case
       the utility's behavior would be undefined. In the POSIX locale
       each byte is a valid single-byte character, and therefore this
       problem is avoided.

       On implementations where the "==" operator checks if strings
       collate equally, applications needing to check whether strings
       are identical can use:


	   length(a) == length(b) && index(a,b) == 1

       On implementations where the "==" operator checks if strings are
       identical, applications needing to check whether strings collate
       equally can use:


	   a <= b && a >= b

EXAMPLES
       The awk program specified in the command line is most easily
       specified within single-quotes (for example, 'program') for
       applications using sh, because awk programs commonly contain
       characters that are special to the shell, including double-
       quotes. In the cases where an awk program contains single-quote
       characters, it is usually easiest to specify most of the program
       as strings within single-quotes concatenated by the shell with
       quoted single-quote characters. For example:


	   awk '/'\''/ { print "quote:", $0 }'

       prints all lines from the standard input containing a single-
       quote character, prefixed with quote:.

       The following are examples of simple awk programs:

	1. Write to the standard output all input lines for which field
	   3 is greater than 5:


	       $3 > 5

	2. Write every tenth line:


	       (NR % 10) == 0

	3. Write any line with a substring matching the regular
	   expression:


	       /(G|D)(2[0-9][[:alpha:]]*)/

	4. Print any line with a substring containing a 'G' or 'D',
	   followed by a sequence of digits and characters. This example
	   uses character classes digit and alpha to match language-
	   independent digit and alphabetic characters respectively:


	       /(G|D)([[:digit:][:alpha:]]*)/

	5. Write any line in which the second field matches the regular
	   expression and the fourth field does not:


	       $2 ~ /xyz/ && $4 !~ /xyz/

	6. Write any line in which the second field contains a
	   <backslash>:


	       $2 ~ /\\/

	7. Write any line in which the second field contains a
	   <backslash>.	 Note that <backslash>-escapes are interpreted
	   twice; once in lexical processing of the string and once in
	   processing the regular expression:


	       $2 ~ "\\\\"

	8. Write the second to the last and the last field in each line.
	   Separate the fields by a <colon>:


	       {OFS=":";print $(NF-1), $NF}

	9. Write the line number and number of fields in each line. The
	   three strings representing the line number, the <colon>, and
	   the number of fields are concatenated and that string is
	   written to standard output:


	       {print NR ":" NF}

       10. Write lines longer than 72 characters:


	       length($0) > 72

       11. Write the first two fields in opposite order separated by
	   OFS:


	       { print $2, $1 }

       12. Same, with input fields separated by a <comma> or <space> and
	   <tab> characters, or both:


	       BEGIN { FS = ",[ \t]*|[ \t]+" }
		     { print $2, $1 }

       13. Add up the first column, print sum, and average:


		     {s += $1 }
	       END   {print "sum is ", s, " average is", s/NR}

       14. Write fields in reverse order, one per line (many lines out
	   for each line in):


	       { for (i = NF; i > 0; --i) print $i }

       15. Write all lines between occurrences of the strings start and
	   stop:


	       /start/, /stop/

       16. Write all lines whose first field is different from the
	   previous one:


	       $1 != prev { print; prev = $1 }

       17. Simulate echo:


	       BEGIN  {
		       for (i = 1; i < ARGC; ++i)
		       printf("%s%s", ARGV[i], i==ARGC-1?"\n":" ")
	       }

       18. Write the path prefixes contained in the PATH environment
	   variable, one per line:


	       BEGIN  {
		       n = split (ENVIRON["PATH"], path, ":")
		       for (i = 1; i <= n; ++i)
		       print path[i]
	       }

       19. If there is a file named input containing page headers of the
	   form: Page #

	   and a file named program that contains:


	       /Page/	{ $2 = n++; }
			{ print }

	   then the command line:


	       awk -f program n=5 input

	   prints the file input, filling in page numbers starting at 5.

RATIONALE
       This description is based on the new awk, ``nawk'', (see the
       referenced The AWK Programming Language), which introduced a
       number of new features to the historical awk:

	1. New keywords: delete, do, function, return

	2. New built-in functions: atan2, close, cos, gsub, match, rand,
	   sin, srand, sub, system

	3. New predefined variables: FNR, ARGC, ARGV, RSTART, RLENGTH,
	   SUBSEP

	4. New expression operators: ?, :, ,, ^

	5. The FS variable and the third argument to split, now treated
	   as extended regular expressions.

	6. The operator precedence, changed to more closely match the C
	   language.  Two examples of code that operate differently are:


	       while ( n /= 10 > 1) ...
	       if (!"wk" ~ /bwk/) ...

       Several features have been added based on newer implementations
       of awk:

	*  Multiple instances of -f progfile are permitted.

	*  The new option -v assignment.

	*  The new predefined variable ENVIRON.

	*  New built-in functions toupper and tolower.

	*  More formatting capabilities are added to printf to match the
	   ISO C standard.

       Earlier versions of this standard required implementations to
       support multiple adjacent <semicolon>s, lines with one or more
       <semicolon> before a rule (pattern-action pairs), and lines with
       only <semicolon>(s).  These are not required by this standard and
       are considered poor programming practice, but can be accepted by
       an implementation of awk as an extension.

       The overall awk syntax has always been based on the C language,
       with a few features from the shell command language and other
       sources. Because of this, it is not completely compatible with
       any other language, which has caused confusion for some users. It
       is not the intent of the standard developers to address such
       issues. A few relatively minor changes toward making the language
       more compatible with the ISO C standard were made; most of these
       changes are based on similar changes in recent implementations,
       as described above. There remain several C-language conventions
       that are not in awk.  One of the notable ones is the <comma>
       operator, which is commonly used to specify multiple expressions
       in the C language for statement. Also, there are various places
       where awk is more restrictive than the C language regarding the
       type of expression that can be used in a given context. These
       limitations are due to the different features that the awk
       language does provide.

       Regular expressions in awk have been extended somewhat from
       historical implementations to make them a pure superset of
       extended regular expressions, as defined by POSIX.1-2008 (see the
       Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Section 9.4, Extended
       Regular Expressions).  The main extensions are
       internationalization features and interval expressions.
       Historical implementations of awk have long supported
       <backslash>-escape sequences as an extension to extended regular
       expressions, and this extension has been retained despite
       inconsistency with other utilities. The number of escape
       sequences recognized in both extended regular expressions and
       strings has varied (generally increasing with time) among
       implementations. The set specified by POSIX.1-2008 includes most
       sequences known to be supported by popular implementations and by
       the ISO C standard. One sequence that is not supported is
       hexadecimal value escapes beginning with '\x'.  This would allow
       values expressed in more than 9 bits to be used within awk as in
       the ISO C standard. However, because this syntax has a non-
       deterministic length, it does not permit the subsequent character
       to be a hexadecimal digit. This limitation can be dealt with in
       the C language by the use of lexical string concatenation. In the
       awk language, concatenation could also be a solution for strings,
       but not for extended regular expressions (either lexical ERE
       tokens or strings used dynamically as regular expressions).
       Because of this limitation, the feature has not been added to
       POSIX.1-2008.

       When a string variable is used in a context where an extended
       regular expression normally appears (where the lexical token ERE
       is used in the grammar) the string does not contain the literal
       <slash> characters.

       Some versions of awk allow the form:


	   func name(args, ... ) { statements }

       This has been deprecated by the authors of the language, who
       asked that it not be specified.

       Historical implementations of awk produce an error if a next
       statement is executed in a BEGIN action, and cause awk to
       terminate if a next statement is executed in an END action. This
       behavior has not been documented, and it was not believed that it
       was necessary to standardize it.

       The specification of conversions between string and numeric
       values is much more detailed than in the documentation of
       historical implementations or in the referenced The AWK
       Programming Language. Although most of the behavior is designed
       to be intuitive, the details are necessary to ensure compatible
       behavior from different implementations. This is especially
       important in relational expressions since the types of the
       operands determine whether a string or numeric comparison is
       performed. From the perspective of an application developer, it
       is usually sufficient to expect intuitive behavior and to force
       conversions (by adding zero or concatenating a null string) when
       the type of an expression does not obviously match what is
       needed. The intent has been to specify historical practice in
       almost all cases. The one exception is that, in historical
       implementations, variables and constants maintain both string and
       numeric values after their original value is converted by any
       use. This means that referencing a variable or constant can have
       unexpected side-effects. For example, with historical
       implementations the following program:


	   {
	       a = "+2"
	       b = 2
	       if (NR % 2)
		   c = a + b
	       if (a == b)
		   print "numeric comparison"
	       else
		   print "string comparison"
	   }

       would perform a numeric comparison (and output numeric
       comparison) for each odd-numbered line, but perform a string
       comparison (and output string comparison) for each even-numbered
       line. POSIX.1-2008 ensures that comparisons will be numeric if
       necessary. With historical implementations, the following
       program:


	   BEGIN {
	       OFMT = "%e"
	       print 3.14
	       OFMT = "%f"
	       print 3.14
	   }

       would output "3.140000e+00" twice, because in the second print
       statement the constant "3.14" would have a string value from the
       previous conversion. POSIX.1-2008 requires that the output of the
       second print statement be "3.140000".  The behavior of historical
       implementations was seen as too unintuitive and unpredictable.

       It was pointed out that with the rules contained in early drafts,
       the following script would print nothing:


	   BEGIN {
	       y[1.5] = 1
	       OFMT = "%e"
	       print y[1.5]
	   }

       Therefore, a new variable, CONVFMT, was introduced. The OFMT
       variable is now restricted to affecting output conversions of
       numbers to strings and CONVFMT is used for internal conversions,
       such as comparisons or array indexing. The default value is the
       same as that for OFMT, so unless a program changes CONVFMT (which
       no historical program would do), it will receive the historical
       behavior associated with internal string conversions.

       The POSIX awk lexical and syntactic conventions are specified
       more formally than in other sources. Again the intent has been to
       specify historical practice. One convention that may not be
       obvious from the formal grammar as in other verbal descriptions
       is where <newline> characters are acceptable. There are several
       obvious placements such as terminating a statement, and a
       <backslash> can be used to escape <newline> characters between
       any lexical tokens. In addition, <newline> characters without
       <backslash> characters can follow a comma, an open brace, a
       logical AND operator ("&&"), a logical OR operator ("||"), the do
       keyword, the else keyword, and the closing parenthesis of an if,
       for, or while statement. For example:


	   { print $1,
		   $2 }

       The requirement that awk add a trailing <newline> to the program
       argument text is to simplify the grammar, making it match a text
       file in form. There is no way for an application or test suite to
       determine whether a literal <newline> is added or whether awk
       simply acts as if it did.

       POSIX.1-2008 requires several changes from historical
       implementations in order to support internationalization.
       Probably the most subtle of these is the use of the decimal-point
       character, defined by the LC_NUMERIC category of the locale, in
       representations of floating-point numbers.  This locale-specific
       character is used in recognizing numeric input, in converting
       between strings and numeric values, and in formatting output.
       However, regardless of locale, the <period> character (the
       decimal-point character of the POSIX locale) is the decimal-point
       character recognized in processing awk programs (including
       assignments in command line arguments). This is essentially the
       same convention as the one used in the ISO C standard. The
       difference is that the C language includes the setlocale()
       function, which permits an application to modify its locale.
       Because of this capability, a C application begins executing with
       its locale set to the C locale, and only executes in the
       environment-specified locale after an explicit call to
       setlocale().  However, adding such an elaborate new feature to
       the awk language was seen as inappropriate for POSIX.1-2008. It
       is possible to execute an awk program explicitly in any desired
       locale by setting the environment in the shell.

       The undefined behavior resulting from NULs in extended regular
       expressions allows future extensions for the GNU gawk program to
       process binary data.

       The behavior in the case of invalid awk programs (including
       lexical, syntactic, and semantic errors) is undefined because it
       was considered overly limiting on implementations to specify. In
       most cases such errors can be expected to produce a diagnostic
       and a non-zero exit status. However, some implementations may
       choose to extend the language in ways that make use of certain
       invalid constructs. Other invalid constructs might be deemed
       worthy of a warning, but otherwise cause some reasonable
       behavior. Still other constructs may be very difficult to detect
       in some implementations.	 Also, different implementations might
       detect a given error during an initial parsing of the program
       (before reading any input files) while others might detect it
       when executing the program after reading some input. Implementors
       should be aware that diagnosing errors as early as possible and
       producing useful diagnostics can ease debugging of applications,
       and thus make an implementation more usable.

       The unspecified behavior from using multi-character RS values is
       to allow possible future extensions based on extended regular
       expressions used for record separators. Historical
       implementations take the first character of the string and ignore
       the others.

       Unspecified behavior when split(string,array,<null>) is used is
       to allow a proposed future extension that would split up a string
       into an array of individual characters.

       In the context of the getline function, equally good arguments
       for different precedences of the | and < operators can be made.
       Historical practice has been that:


	   getline < "a" "b"

       is parsed as:


	   ( getline < "a" ) "b"

       although many would argue that the intent was that the file ab
       should be read. However:


	   getline < "x" + 1

       parses as:


	   getline < ( "x" + 1 )

       Similar problems occur with the | version of getline,
       particularly in combination with $.  For example:


	   $"echo hi" | getline

       (This situation is particularly problematic when used in a print
       statement, where the |getline part might be a redirection of the
       print.)

       Since in most cases such constructs are not (or at least should
       not) be used (because they have a natural ambiguity for which
       there is no conventional parsing), the meaning of these
       constructs has been made explicitly unspecified. (The effect is
       that a conforming application that runs into the problem must
       parenthesize to resolve the ambiguity.)	There appeared to be few
       if any actual uses of such constructs.

       Grammars can be written that would cause an error under these
       circumstances. Where backwards-compatibility is not a large
       consideration, implementors may wish to use such grammars.

       Some historical implementations have allowed some built-in
       functions to be called without an argument list, the result being
       a default argument list chosen in some ``reasonable'' way. Use of
       length as a synonym for length($0) is the only one of these forms
       that is thought to be widely known or widely used; this
       particular form is documented in various places (for example,
       most historical awk reference pages, although not in the
       referenced The AWK Programming Language) as legitimate practice.
       With this exception, default argument lists have always been
       undocumented and vaguely defined, and it is not at all clear how
       (or if) they should be generalized to user-defined functions.
       They add no useful functionality and preclude possible future
       extensions that might need to name functions without calling
       them. Not standardizing them seems the simplest course. The
       standard developers considered that length merited special
       treatment, however, since it has been documented in the past and
       sees possibly substantial use in historical programs.
       Accordingly, this usage has been made legitimate, but Issue 5
       removed the obsolescent marking for XSI-conforming
       implementations and many otherwise conforming applications depend
       on this feature.

       In sub and gsub, if repl is a string literal (the lexical token
       STRING), then two consecutive <backslash> characters should be
       used in the string to ensure a single <backslash> will precede
       the <ampersand> when the resultant string is passed to the
       function. (For example, to specify one literal <ampersand> in the
       replacement string, use gsub(ERE, "\\&").)

       Historically, the only special character in the repl argument of
       sub and gsub string functions was the <ampersand> ('&') character
       and preceding it with the <backslash> character was used to turn
       off its special meaning.

       The description in the ISO POSIX-2:1993 standard introduced
       behavior such that the <backslash> character was another special
       character and it was unspecified whether there were any other
       special characters. This description introduced several
       portability problems, some of which are described below, and so
       it has been replaced with the more historical description. Some
       of the problems include:

	*  Historically, to create the replacement string, a script
	   could use gsub(ERE, "\\&"), but with the ISO POSIX-2:1993
	   standard wording, it was necessary to use gsub(ERE, "\\\\&").
	   The <backslash> characters are doubled here because all
	   string literals are subject to lexical analysis, which would
	   reduce each pair of <backslash> characters to a single
	   <backslash> before being passed to gsub.

	*  Since it was unspecified what the special characters were,
	   for portable scripts to guarantee that characters are printed
	   literally, each character had to be preceded with a
	   <backslash>.	 (For example, a portable script had to use
	   gsub(ERE, "\\h\\i") to produce a replacement string of "hi".)

       The description for comparisons in the ISO POSIX-2:1993 standard
       did not properly describe historical practice because of the way
       numeric strings are compared as numbers. The current rules cause
       the following code:


	   if (0 == "000")
	       print "strange, but true"
	   else
	       print "not true"

       to do a numeric comparison, causing the if to succeed. It should
       be intuitively obvious that this is incorrect behavior, and
       indeed, no historical implementation of awk actually behaves this
       way.

       To fix this problem, the definition of numeric string was
       enhanced to include only those values obtained from specific
       circumstances (mostly external sources) where it is not possible
       to determine unambiguously whether the value is intended to be a
       string or a numeric.

       Variables that are assigned to a numeric string shall also be
       treated as a numeric string. (For example, the notion of a
       numeric string can be propagated across assignments.) In
       comparisons, all variables having the uninitialized value are to
       be treated as a numeric operand evaluating to the numeric value
       zero.

       Uninitialized variables include all types of variables including
       scalars, array elements, and fields. The definition of an
       uninitialized value in Variables and Special Variables is
       necessary to describe the value placed on uninitialized variables
       and on fields that are valid (for example, < $NF) but have no
       characters in them and to describe how these variables are to be
       used in comparisons. A valid field, such as $1, that has no
       characters in it can be obtained from an input line of "\t\t"
       when FS='\t'.  Historically, the comparison ($1<10) was done
       numerically after evaluating $1 to the value zero.

       The phrase ``... also shall have the numeric value of the numeric
       string'' was removed from several sections of the
       ISO POSIX-2:1993 standard because is specifies an unnecessary
       implementation detail. It is not necessary for POSIX.1-2008 to
       specify that these objects be assigned two different values.  It
       is only necessary to specify that these objects may evaluate to
       two different values depending on context.

       Historical implementations of awk did not parse hexadecimal
       integer or floating constants like "0xa" and "0xap0".  Due to an
       oversight, the 2001 through 2004 editions of this standard
       required support for hexadecimal floating constants. This was due
       to the reference to atof().  This version of the standard allows
       but does not require implementations to use atof() and includes a
       description of how floating-point numbers are recognized as an
       alternative to match historic behavior. The intent of this change
       is to allow implementations to recognize floating-point constants
       according to either the ISO/IEC 9899:1990 standard or
       ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard, and to allow (but not require)
       implementations to recognize hexadecimal integer constants.

       Historical implementations of awk did not support floating-point
       infinities and NaNs in numeric strings; e.g., "-INF" and "NaN".
       However, implementations that use the atof() or strtod()
       functions to do the conversion picked up support for these values
       if they used a ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard version of the function
       instead of a ISO/IEC 9899:1990 standard version. Due to an
       oversight, the 2001 through 2004 editions of this standard did
       not allow support for infinities and NaNs, but in this revision
       support is allowed (but not required). This is a silent change to
       the behavior of awk programs; for example, in the POSIX locale
       the expression:


	   ("-INF" + 0 < 0)

       formerly had the value 0 because "-INF" converted to 0, but now
       it may have the value 0 or 1.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       A future version of this standard may require the "!=" and "=="
       operators to perform string comparisons by checking if the
       strings are identical (and not by checking if they collate
       equally).

SEE ALSO
       Section 1.3, Grammar Conventions, grep, lex, sed

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, Chapter 5, File
       Format Notation, Section 6.1, Portable Character Set, Chapter 8,
       Environment Variables, Chapter 9, Regular Expressions, Section
       12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines

       The System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1-2017, atof(), exec,
       isspace(), popen(), setlocale(), strtod()

COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic
       form from IEEE Std 1003.1-2017, Standard for Information
       Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The
       Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, Copyright
       (C) 2018 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics
       Engineers, Inc and The Open Group.  In the event of any
       discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The
       Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be
       obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

       Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page
       are most likely to have been introduced during the conversion of
       the source files to man page format. To report such errors, see
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .

IEEE/The Open Group		  2017				 AWK(1P)