The awk language uses the common arithmetic operators when evaluating expressions. All of these arithmetic operators follow normal precedence rules and work as you would expect them to.
The following example uses a file named grades, which contains a list of student names as well as three test scores per student (it's a small class):
Pat 100 97 58 Sandy 84 72 93 Chris 72 92 89
This programs takes the file grades and prints the average of the scores:
$ awk '{ sum = $2 + $3 + $4 ; avg = sum / 3 > print $1, avg }' grades -| Pat 85 -| Sandy 83 -| Chris 84.3333
The following list provides the arithmetic operators in awk, in order from the highest precedence to the lowest:
-
x+
x ^
y **
y *
y /
y %
y +
y -
yUnary plus and minus have the same precedence, the multiplication operators all have the same precedence, and addition and subtraction have the same precedence.
When computing the remainder of x %
y,
the quotient is rounded toward zero to an integer and
multiplied by y. This result is subtracted from x;
this operation is sometimes known as “trunc-mod.” The following
relation always holds:
b * int(a / b) + (a % b) == a
One possibly undesirable effect of this definition of remainder is that
x %
y is negative if x is negative. Thus:
-17 % 8 = -1
In other awk implementations, the signedness of the remainder may be machine-dependent.
NOTE: The POSIX standard only specifies the use of `^' for exponentiation. For maximum portability, do not use the `**' operator.