I know that the -k option for the Unix sort allow us to sort by a specific column and all of the following. For instance, given the input file:
2 3
2 2
1 2
2 1
1 1Using sort -n -k 1, I get an output sorted by the 1st column and then by the 2nd:
1 1
1 2
2 1
2 2
2 3However, I want to keep the 2nd column ordering, like this:
1 2
1 1
2 3
2 2
2 1Is this possible with the sort command?
3 Answers
Give this a try:
sort -s -n -k 1,1The -s disables 'last-resort' sorting, which sorts on everything that wasn't part of a specified key.
The -k 1 doesn't actually mean "this field and all of the following" in the context of numeric sort, as you can see if you try to sort on the second column. You're merely seeing ties broken by going to the rest of the line. In general, however, you need to specify -k 1,1 to sort only on field one.
To only sort on the first column you should do:
sort -n -s -k1,1From Unix and Linux System Administration Handbook
2sort accepts the key specification -k3 (rather than -k3,3), but it probably doesn’t do what you expect. Without the terminating field number, the sort key continues to the end of the line
None of the provided answers work generally for me.
Both sort -s -k 2 file1 and sort -n -k1,1 do additional sorting with this file:
# cat file1 3 3 5 3 2 3 1 4 7 0 1 2 3 2 1I just had to do this exact thing and ended up using a shell loop. This solution might not work well on a very large file because the entire file needs to be read for each unique value in the sorted column.
Here the file is sorted on column 2 only.
# awk '{print $2}' file1 | sort | uniq | while read index
do awk -v var=$index '$2 == var { print $0}' file1
done 0 1 2 3 2 3 3 2 1 3 3 5 1 4 7 2