Uniq

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The correct title of this article is uniq. The initial letter is shown capitalized due to technical restrictions.
This article is about the Unix utility. For other uses, see Uniq (disambiguation).

uniq is a Unix utility which, when fed a text file, outputs the file with adjacent identical lines collapsed to one. It is a kind of filter program. Typically it is used after sort. It can also output only the duplicate lines (with the -d option), or add the number of occurrences of each line (with the -c option).

An example: To see the list of lines in a file, sorted by the number of times each occurs:

sort file | uniq -c | sort -n

Using uniq like this is common when building pipelines in shell scripts.

[edit] Switches

  • -u Print only lines which are not repeated in the original file
  • -d Print one copy only of each repeated line in the input file.
  • -c Generate an output report in default style except that each line is preceded by a count of the number of times it occurred. If this option is specified, the -u and -d options are ignored if either or both are also present.
  • -i Ignore case differences when comparing lines
  • -s Skips a number of characters in a line
  • -w Specifies the number of characters to compare in lines, after any characters and fields have been skipped
  • --help Displays a help message
  • --version Displays version number on stdout and exits.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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