资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Awk \Awk\, adv.
Perversely; in the wrong way. --L'Estrange.
Awk \Awk\ ([add]k), a. [OE. auk, awk (properly) turned away;
(hence) contrary, wrong, from Icel. ["o]figr, ["o]fugr,
afigr, turning the wrong way, fr. af off, away; cf. OHG.
abuh, Skr. ap[=a]c turned away, fr. apa off, away + a root
ak, a[u^]k, to bend, from which come also E. angle, anchor.]
1. Odd; out of order; perverse. [Obs.]
2. Wrong, or not commonly used; clumsy; sinister; as, the awk
end of a rod (the but end). [Obs.] --Golding.
3. Clumsy in performance or manners; unhandy; not dexterous;
awkward. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.]
资料来源 : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
awk
1. (Named from the authors' initials) An
interpreted language included with many versions of {Unix} for
massaging text data, developed by Alfred Aho, Peter Weinberger,
and Brian Kernighan in 1978. It is characterised by {C}-like
syntax, declaration-free variables, {associative arrays}, and
field-oriented text processing.
There is a {GNU} version called {gawk} and other varients
including {bawk}, {mawk}, {nawk}, {tawk}. {Perl} was inspired
in part by awk but is much more powerful.
{Unix manual page}: awk(1).
{netlib WWW
(http://plan9.att.com/netlib/research/index.html)}. {netlib
FTP (ftp://netlib.att.com/netlib/research/)}.
["The AWK Programming Language" A. Aho, B. Kernighan,
P. Weinberger, A-W 1988].
2. An expression which is awkward to manipulate
through normal {regexp} facilities, for example, one
containing a {newline}.
[{Jargon File}]
(1995-10-06)