I am processing a fairly big collection of Tweets and I'd like to obtain, for each tweet, its mentions (other user's names, prefixed with an @
), if the mentioned user is also in the file:
users = new Dictionary()
for each line in file:
username = get_username(line)
userid = get_userid(line)
users.add(key = userid, value = username)
for each line in file:
mentioned_names = get_mentioned_names(line)
mentioned_ids = mentioned_names.map(x => if x in users: users[x] else null)
print "$line | $mentioned_ids"
I was already processing the file with GAWK, so instead of processing it again in Python or C I decided to try and add this to my AWK script. However, I can't find a way to make to passes over the same file, executing different code for each one. Most solutions imply calling AWK several times, but then I'd loose the associative array I made in the first pass.
I could do it in very hacky ways (like cat
'ing the file twice, passing it through sed
to add a different prefix to all the lines in each cat
), but I'd like to be able to understand this code in a couple of months without hating myself.
What would be the AWK way to do this?
PD:
The less terrible way I've found:
function rewind( i)
{
# from https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Rewind-Function.html
# shift remaining arguments up
for (i = ARGC; i > ARGIND; i--)
ARGV[i] = ARGV[i-1]
# make sure gawk knows to keep going
ARGC++
# make current file next to get done
ARGV[ARGIND+1] = FILENAME
# do it
nextfile
}
BEGIN {
count = 1;
}
count == 1 {
# first pass, fills an associative array
}
count == 2 {
# second pass, uses the array
}
FNR == 30 {
# handcoded length, horrible
# could also be automated calling wc -l, passing as parameter
if (count == 1) {
count = 2;
rewind(1)
}
}