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Home/ Questions/Q 8234777
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T18:35:48+00:00 2026-06-07T18:35:48+00:00

I have a utility script in Python: #!/usr/bin/env python import sys unique_lines = []

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I have a utility script in Python:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
unique_lines = []
duplicate_lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
  if line in unique_lines:
    duplicate_lines.append(line)
  else:
    unique_lines.append(line)
    sys.stdout.write(line)
# optionally do something with duplicate_lines

This simple functionality (uniq without needing to sort first, stable ordering) must be available as a simple UNIX utility, mustn’t it? Maybe a combination of filters in a pipe?

Reason for asking: needing this functionality on a system on which I cannot execute Python from anywhere.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T18:35:50+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 6:35 pm

    The UNIX Bash Scripting blog suggests:

    awk '!x[$0]++'
    

    This command is telling awk which lines to print. The variable $0 holds the entire contents of a line and square brackets are array access. So, for each line of the file, the node of the array x is incremented and the line printed if the content of that node was not (!) previously set.

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