Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 19:32:40 +1030 From: Wayne Sierke <ws+freebsd-questions@au.dyndns.ws> To: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Size of variables in awk Message-ID: <1078304560.666.157.camel@ovirt.dyndns.ws> In-Reply-To: <20040303080359.GB79860@dan.emsphone.com> References: <1078286126.666.11.camel@ovirt.dyndns.ws> <20040303080359.GB79860@dan.emsphone.com>
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On Wed, 2004-03-03 at 18:34, Dan Nelson wrote: > In the last episode (Mar 03), Wayne Sierke said: > > It seems I've run into the 32-bit signed number wall in awk > > (5.2-RELEASE). > > > > My totals are maxing out at 2147483648. > > > > Would anyone happen to know whether that's really the case (that awk is > > only implemented with 32-bit number capability - unfortunately I don't > > have any other awks nearby to verify nor can I find any reference info > > that indicates) and/or can suggest a way around it? > > Seems to works fine on -current: > > $ jot 8 30 | awk '{ print 2^$1 }' > 1073741824 > 2147483648 > 4294967296 > 8589934592 > 17179869184 > 34359738368 > 68719476736 > 137438953472 Ah, ok. Same for me on 5.2-RELEASE. More info: I'm using the printf function in awk but something ain't right: # jot 4 30 | awk '{ printf("%u\n", 2^$1-1) }' 1073741823 2147483647 2147483648 2147483648 # jot 4 30 | awk '{ printf("%lu\n", 2^$1-1) }' 1073741823 2147483647 2147483648 2147483648 # jot 4 30 | awk '{ printf("%llu\n", 2^$1-1) }' 35185445830655 35186519572479 35186519572480 35186519572480 Thoughts? Wayne
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