cut is a shellcommand that extracts sections from each line of input text — usually from a file. Extraction of line segments can typically be done by bytes (-b), characters (-c), or fields (-f) separated by a delimiter (-d — the tab character by default). A range must be provided in each case which consists of one of N, N-M, N- (N to the end of the line), or -M (beginning of the line to M), where N and M are counted from 1 (there is no zeroth value). Since version 6, an error is thrown if you include a zeroth value. Prior to this the value was ignored and assumed to be 1.
History
The original Bell Labs version was written by Gottfried W. R. Luderer.[1][2] The command is part of the X/Open Portability Guide since issue 2 of 1987. It was inherited into the first version of POSIX.1 and the Single Unix Specification.[3] It first appeared in AT&T System III UNIX in 1982.[4]
The command is commonly available on Unix and Unix-likeoperating systems. It is part of the BSD Base System. The version in GNUcoreutils was written by David M. Ihnat, David MacKenzie, and Jim Meyering.[5] The command is available for Windows via UnxUtils.[6] The command was ported to the IBM i operating system.[7]
Use
The command line consists of options and an optional file path. If no path is specified than standard input will be used.
Options include:
-b
Bytes; a list following -b specifies a range of bytes which will be returned, e.g. cut -b1-66 would return the first 66 bytes of a line. NB If used in conjunction with -n, no multi-byte characters will be split. NNB. -b will only work on input lines of less than 1023 bytes
-c
Characters; a list following -c specifies a range of characters which will be returned, e.g. cut -c1-66 would return the first 66 characters of a line
A comma separated or blank separated list of integer denoted fields, incrementally ordered. The - indicator may be supplied as shorthand to allow inclusion of ranges of fields e.g. 4-6 for ranges 4–6 or 5- as shorthand for field 5 to the end, etc.
Delimiter; the character immediately following the -d option is the field delimiter for use in conjunction with the -f option; the default delimiter is tab. Space and other characters with special meanings within the context of the shell in use must be enquoted or escaped as necessary.
-s
Bypasses lines which contain no field delimiters when -f is specified, unless otherwise indicated.
Examples
Given a file named foo with content:
foo:bar:baz:qux:quux
one:two:three:four:five:six:seven
alpha:beta:gamma:delta:epsilon:zeta:eta:theta:iota:kappa:lambda:mu
the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
To output the fourth through tenth characters of each line:
$ cut-c4-10foo
:bar:ba:two:thha:beta quick
To output the fifth field through the end of the line of each line using the colon character as the field delimiter:
$ cut-d":"-f5-foo
quuxfive:six:sevenepsilon:zeta:eta:theta:iota:kappa:lambda:muthe quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Because the colon is not found in the last line, the entire line is shown.
Option -d specifies a single character delimiter (in the example above it is a colon) which serves as field separator. Option -f which specifies range of fields included in the output (here fields range from five till the end). Option -d presupposes usage of option -f.
To output the third field of each line using space as the field delimiter: