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UNIX in a Nutshell: System V Edition

UNIX in a Nutshell: System V EditionSearch this book
Previous: 11.6 Variables and Array AssignmentsChapter 11
The awk Programming Language
Next: 11.8 Group Listing of awk Functions and Commands
 

11.7 User-Defined Functions

nawk allows you to define your own functions. This makes it easy to encapsulate sequences of steps that need to be repeated into a single place, and reuse the code from anywhere in your program. Note: for user-defined functions, no space is allowed between the function name and the left parenthesis when the function is called.

The following function capitalizes each word in a string. It has one parameter, named input, and five local variables, which are written as extra parameters.

# capitalize each word in a string
function capitalize(input,    result, words, n, i, w)
{
	result = ""
	n = split(input, words, " ")
	for (i = 1; i <= n; i++) {
		w = words[i]
		w = toupper(substr(w, 1, 1)) substr(w, 2)
		if (i > 1)
			result = result " "
		result = result w
	}
	return result
}

# main program, for testing
{ print capitalize($0) }

With this input data:

A test line with words and numbers like 12 on it.

This program produces:

A Test Line With Words And Numbers Like 12 On It.


Previous: 11.6 Variables and Array AssignmentsUNIX in a Nutshell: System V EditionNext: 11.8 Group Listing of awk Functions and Commands
11.6 Variables and Array AssignmentsBook Index11.8 Group Listing of awk Functions and Commands

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