Name
join
Synopsis
join [options]file1 file2
Joins the common lines of sorted file1 and
sorted file2. Reads standard input if
file1 is -. The output
contains the common field and the remainder of each line from
file1 and
file2. In the following options,
n can be 1 or 2, referring to
file1 or file2.
Options
-
-a[n] List unpairable lines in file
n(or both ifnis omitted).-
-es Replace any empty output field with the string
s.-
-jn m Join on the
mth field of filen(or both files ifnis omitted).-
-on.m Each output line contains fields specified by file number
nand field numberm. The common field is suppressed unless requested.-
-tc Use character
cas field separator for input and output.-
-vn Print only the unpairable lines in file
n. With both-v1and-v2, all unpairable lines are printed.-
-1m Join on field
moffile1. Fields start with 1.-
-2m Join on field
moffile2. Fields start with 1.
Examples
Assuming the following input files:
$cat scoreolga 81 91 rene 82 92 zack 83 93 $cat gradeolga B A rene B A
List scores followed by grades, including unmatched lines:
$ join -a1 score grade
olga 81 91 B A
rene 82 92 B A
zack 83 93Pair each score with its grade:
$ join -o 1.1 1.2 2.2 1.3 2.3 score grade
olga 81 B 91 A
rene 82 B 92 ABecome an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
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