diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'awk.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | awk.html.markdown | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/awk.html.markdown b/awk.html.markdown index 3d2c4ccb..3b6e34b4 100644 --- a/awk.html.markdown +++ b/awk.html.markdown @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ AWK is a standard tool on every POSIX-compliant UNIX system. It's like flex/lex, from the command-line, perfect for text-processing tasks and other scripting needs. It has a C-like syntax, but without mandatory semicolons (although, you should use them anyway, because they are required -when you're writing one-liners, something AWK excells at), manual memory +when you're writing one-liners, something AWK excels at), manual memory management, or static typing. It excels at text processing. You can call to it from a shell script, or you can use it as a stand-alone scripting language. @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ pattern2 { action; } # There is an implied loop and AWK automatically reads and parses each # record of each file supplied. Each record is split by the FS delimiter, # which defaults to white-space (multiple spaces,tabs count as one) -# You cann assign FS either on the command line (-F C) or in your BEGIN +# You can assign FS either on the command line (-F C) or in your BEGIN # pattern # One of the special patterns is BEGIN. The BEGIN pattern is true @@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ function io_functions( localvar) { # handle for you when you use something that needs one. The string you used # for this can be treated as a file handle, for purposes of I/O. This makes # it feel sort of like shell scripting, but to get the same output, the string - # must match exactly, so use a vaiable: + # must match exactly, so use a variable: outfile = "/tmp/foobar.txt"; |