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Home/ Questions/Q 3490268
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T11:29:44+00:00 2026-05-18T11:29:44+00:00

I need to parse an CSV file using AWK. A line in the CSV

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I need to parse an CSV file using AWK. A line in the CSV could look like this:

"hello, world?",1 thousand,"oneword",,,"last one"

Some important observations:
-field inside quoted string can contain commas and multiple words
-unquoted field can be multiple worlds
-field can be empty by just having two commas in a row

Any clues on writing a regex expression to split this line up properly?

Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T11:29:44+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 11:29 am

    As many have observed, CSV is a harder format than it first appears. There are many edge cases and ambiguities. As an example ambiguity, in your example, is ‘,,,’ a field with a comma or two blank fields?

    Perl, python, Java, etc are better equipped to deal with CSV because they have well tested libraries for the same. A regex will be more fragile.

    With AWK, I have had some success with THIS AWK function. It works under AWK, gawk and nawk.

    #!/usr/bin/awk -f
    #**************************************************************************
    #
    # This file is in the public domain.
    #
    # For more information email LoranceStinson+csv@gmail.com.
    # Or see http://lorance.freeshell.org/csv/
    #
    # Parse a CSV string into an array.
    # The number of fields found is returned.
    # In the event of an error a negative value is returned and csverr is set to
    # the error. See below for the error values.
    #
    # Parameters:
    # string  = The string to parse.
    # csv     = The array to parse the fields into.
    # sep     = The field separator character. Normally ,
    # quote   = The string quote character. Normally "
    # escape  = The quote escape character. Normally "
    # newline = Handle embedded newlines. Provide either a newline or the
    #           string to use in place of a newline. If left empty embedded
    #           newlines cause an error.
    # trim    = When true spaces around the separator are removed.
    #           This affects parsing. Without this a space between the
    #           separator and quote result in the quote being ignored.
    #
    # These variables are private:
    # fields  = The number of fields found thus far.
    # pos     = Where to pull a field from the string.
    # strtrim = True when a string is found so we know to remove the quotes.
    #
    # Error conditions:
    # -1  = Unable to read the next line.
    # -2  = Missing end quote.
    # -3  = Missing separator.
    #
    # Notes:
    # The code assumes that every field is preceded by a separator, even the
    # first field. This makes the logic much simpler, but also requires a
    # separator be prepended to the string before parsing.
    #**************************************************************************
    function parse_csv(string,csv,sep,quote,escape,newline,trim, fields,pos,strtrim) {
        # Make sure there is something to parse.
        if (length(string) == 0) return 0;
        string = sep string; # The code below assumes ,FIELD.
        fields = 0; # The number of fields found thus far.
        while (length(string) > 0) {
            # Remove spaces after the separator if requested.
            if (trim && substr(string, 2, 1) == " ") {
                if (length(string) == 1) return fields;
                string = substr(string, 2);
                continue;
            }
            strtrim = 0; # Used to trim quotes off strings.
            # Handle a quoted field.
            if (substr(string, 2, 1) == quote) {
                pos = 2;
                do {
                    pos++
                    if (pos != length(string) &&
                        substr(string, pos, 1) == escape &&
                        (substr(string, pos + 1, 1) == quote ||
                         substr(string, pos + 1, 1) == escape)) {
                        # Remove escaped quote characters.
                        string = substr(string, 1, pos - 1) substr(string, pos + 1);
                    } else if (substr(string, pos, 1) == quote) {
                        # Found the end of the string.
                        strtrim = 1;
                    } else if (newline && pos >= length(string)) {
                        # Handle embedded newlines if requested.
                        if (getline == -1) {
                            csverr = "Unable to read the next line.";
                            return -1;
                        }
                        string = string newline $0;
                    }
                } while (pos < length(string) && strtrim == 0)
                if (strtrim == 0) {
                    csverr = "Missing end quote.";
                    return -2;
                }
            } else {
                # Handle an empty field.
                if (length(string) == 1 || substr(string, 2, 1) == sep) {
                    csv[fields] = "";
                    fields++;
                    if (length(string) == 1)
                        return fields;
                    string = substr(string, 2);
                    continue;
                }
                # Search for a separator.
                pos = index(substr(string, 2), sep);
                # If there is no separator the rest of the string is a field.
                if (pos == 0) {
                    csv[fields] = substr(string, 2);
                    fields++;
                    return fields;
                }
            }
            # Remove spaces after the separator if requested.
            if (trim && pos != length(string) && substr(string, pos + strtrim, 1) == " ") {
                trim = strtrim
                # Count the number fo spaces found.
                while (pos < length(string) && substr(string, pos + trim, 1) == " ") {
                    trim++
                }
                # Remove them from the string.
                string = substr(string, 1, pos + strtrim - 1) substr(string,  pos + trim);
                # Adjust pos with the trimmed spaces if a quotes string was not found.
                if (!strtrim) {
                    pos -= trim;
                }
            }
            # Make sure we are at the end of the string or there is a separator.
            if ((pos != length(string) && substr(string, pos + 1, 1) != sep)) {
                csverr = "Missing separator.";
                return -3;
            }
            # Gather the field.
            csv[fields] = substr(string, 2 + strtrim, pos - (1 + strtrim * 2));
            fields++;
            # Remove the field from the string for the next pass.
            string = substr(string, pos + 1);
        }
        return fields;
    }
    
    {
        num_fields = parse_csv($0, csv, ",", "\"", "\"", "\\n", 1);
        if (num_fields < 0) {
            printf "ERROR: %s (%d) -> %s\n", csverr, num_fields, $0;
        } else {
            printf "%s -> \n", $0;
            printf "%s fields\n", num_fields;
            for (i = 0;i < num_fields;i++) {
                printf "%s\n", csv[i];
            }
            printf "|\n";
        }
    }
    

    Running it on your example data produces:

    "hello, world?",1 thousand,"oneword",,,"last one" -> 
    6 fields
    hello, world?
    1 thousand
    oneword
    
    
    last one
    |
    

    An example Perl solution:

    $ echo '"hello, world?",1 thousand,"oneword",,,"last one"' | 
    perl -lnE 'for(/(?:^|,)("(?:[^"]+|"")*"|[^,]*)/g) { s/"$//; s/""/"/g if (s/^"//);
    say}'
    
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