One-liner program

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A one-liner is a computer program or expression that takes no more than a single line.

Ideally, one liners will be shorter than 80 characters. In practice, one-liners will be entered and executed directly from the command-line. As a consequence, one-liners are usually implemented with languages like BASIC, Bourne shell, AWK, or Perl. Some functional programming languages also permit one-liners.

Contents

History

The word One-liner has two references in the index of the book The AWK Programming Language (the book is often referred to by the abbreviation TAPL). It explains the programming language AWK, which is part of the Unix operating system. The authors explain the birth of the One-liner paradigm with their daily work on early Unix machines: Template:"

Examples

The TAPL book contains 20 examples of One-liners (A Handful of Useful awk One-Liners) at the end of the book's first chapter.

Here are the very first of them:

1. Print the total number of input lines:
END { print NR }
2. Print the tenth input line:
NR == 10
3. Print the last field of every input line:
{ print $NF }

Many one-liners are practical. For example, the following perl one-liner will reverse all the bytes in a file:

perl -0777e 'print scalar reverse <>' filename

One-liners are also used to show off the differential expressive power of programming languages. Frequently, one-liners are used to demonstrate programming ability. Contests are often held to see who can create the most exceptional one-liner.

The following example is a C program (a winning entry in the "Best one-liner" category of the IOCCC.)

main(int c,char**v){return!m(v[1],v[2]);}m(char*s,char*t){return*t-42?*s?63==*t|*s==*t&&m(s+1,t+1):!*t:m(s,t+1)||*s&&m(s+1,t);}

This one-liner program is a glob pattern matcher. It understands the glob characters `*' meaning `zero or more characters' and `?' meaning exactly one character, just like most Unix shells.

Run it with two args, the string and the glob pattern. The exit status is 0 (shell true) when the pattern matches, 1 otherwise. The glob pattern must match the whole string, so you may want to use * at the beginning and end of the pattern if you are looking for something in the middle. Examples:

$ prog foo 'f??'; echo $?
$ prog 'best short program' '??st*o**p?*'; echo $?

One-liner in functional programming

The following Haskell program is a one-liner, except for the two import statements. It sorts its input lines asciibetically.

import IO
import List
main = (sequence . map putStrLn . sort . lines) =<< getContents

External links

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