A Boolean expression is a combination of comparison expressions or matching expressions, using the Boolean operators “or” (`||'), “and” (`&&'), and “not” (`!'), along with parentheses to control nesting. The truth value of the Boolean expression is computed by combining the truth values of the component expressions. Boolean expressions are also referred to as logical expressions. The terms are equivalent.
Boolean expressions can be used wherever comparison and matching
expressions can be used. They can be used in if
, while
,
do
, and for
statements
(see Statements).
They have numeric values (one if true, zero if false) that come into play
if the result of the Boolean expression is stored in a variable or
used in arithmetic.
In addition, every Boolean expression is also a valid pattern, so you can use one as a pattern to control the execution of rules. The Boolean operators are:
&&
boolean2if ($0 ~ /2400/ && $0 ~ /foo/) print
The subexpression boolean2 is evaluated only if boolean1
is true. This can make a difference when boolean2 contains
expressions that have side effects. In the case of `$0 ~ /foo/ &&
($2 == bar++)', the variable bar
is not incremented if there is
no substring `foo' in the record.
||
boolean2if ($0 ~ /2400/ || $0 ~ /foo/) print
The subexpression boolean2 is evaluated only if boolean1
is false. This can make a difference when boolean2 contains
expressions that have side effects.
!
booleanBEGIN { if (! ("HOME" in ENVIRON)) print "no home!" }
(The in
operator is described in
Reference to Elements.)
The `&&' and `||' operators are called short-circuit operators because of the way they work. Evaluation of the full expression is “short-circuited” if the result can be determined part way through its evaluation.
Statements that use `&&' or `||' can be continued simply by putting a newline after them. But you cannot put a newline in front of either of these operators without using backslash continuation (see Statements/Lines).
The actual value of an expression using the `!' operator is either one or zero, depending upon the truth value of the expression it is applied to. The `!' operator is often useful for changing the sense of a flag variable from false to true and back again. For example, the following program is one way to print lines in between special bracketing lines:
$1 == "START" { interested = ! interested; next } interested == 1 { print } $1 == "END" { interested = ! interested; next }
The variable interested
, as with all awk variables, starts
out initialized to zero, which is also false. When a line is seen whose
first field is `START', the value of interested
is toggled
to true, using `!'. The next rule prints lines as long as
interested
is true. When a line is seen whose first field is
`END', interested
is toggled back to false.
NOTE: Thenext
statement is discussed in Next Statement.next
tells awk to skip the rest of the rules, get the next record, and start processing the rules over again at the top. The reason it's there is to avoid printing the bracketing `START' and `END' lines.