28

I have a 2958616 byte text file. When I run sort < file.txt | uniq > sorted-file.txt, I get a 3213965 byte text file. Why is my sorted text file bigger?

You can download the text files here.

16
  • 5
    Your output file has \r\n line endings, whereas the input file has \n line endings. Perhaps you should set your locale differently. Try LC_ALL=C in front of each command.
    – meuh
    Jul 10, 2016 at 12:19
  • 2
    @meuh That was it! Could you add that as an answer?
    – wb9688
    Jul 10, 2016 at 12:20
  • 5
    Hang on, the locale affects this? What locale are you using? What's the output of locale? Are you sure you didn't create the file on some other system?
    – terdon
    Jul 10, 2016 at 12:22
  • 6
    sed '/^[a-z]*$/d' < file.txt | wc -l gave me 305 lines.
    – meuh
    Jul 10, 2016 at 12:47
  • 5
    Your file also contains â ê î ñ ô ö öö û those aren't in the ASCII set.
    – terdon
    Jul 10, 2016 at 16:42

2 Answers 2

42

While your original file has lines that end with \n, your sorted file has \r\n. The addition of the \r is what changes the size.

To illustrate, here's what happens when I run your command on my Linux system:

$ sort < file.txt | uniq > sorted-file.linux.txt
$ ls -l file.txt sorted-file.linux.txt 
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2958616 Jul 10 12:11 file.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2942389 Jul 10 15:15 sorted-file.linux.txt
$ wc -l file.txt sorted-file.linux.txt 
273882 file.txt
271576 sorted-file.linux.txt

As you can see, the sorted de-duped file is a few lines shorter and, consequently, a few bytes smaller. Your file, however, is different:

$ wc -l sorted-file.linux.txt sorted-file.txt 
271576 sorted-file.linux.txt
271576 sorted-file.txt

The two files have exactly the same number of lines, but:

$ ls -l file.txt sorted-file.linux.txt sorted-file.txt 
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2958616 Jul 10 12:11 file.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2942389 Jul 10 15:15 sorted-file.linux.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 3213965 Jul 10 12:11 sorted-file.txt

The sorted-file.txt, the one I downloaded from your link, is larger. If we now examine the first line, we can see the extra \r:

$ head -n1 sorted-file.txt | od -c
0000000   a  \r  \n
0000003

Which aren't present in the one I created on Linux:

$ head -n1 sorted-file.linux.txt | od -c
0000000   a  \n
0000002

If we now remove the \r from your file:

$ tr -d '\r' < sorted-file.txt > new-sorted-file.txt

We get the expected result, a file that is smaller than the original, just like the one I created on my system:

$ ls -l sorted-file.linux.txt new-sorted-file.txt file.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2958616 Jul 10 12:11 file.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2942389 Jul 10 15:19 new-sorted-file.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 terdon terdon 2942389 Jul 10 15:15 sorted-file.linux.txt
2
  • 3
    How come sort command added \r to the resulting file? Isn't the combination of \r plus \n a Windows thing? Jul 11, 2016 at 13:06
  • 3
    @TulainsCórdova that's a very good question. I have no idea. I am assuming the OP did this in a non-native environment but I don't know. And yes, \r\n line endings are a Windows thing.
    – terdon
    Jul 11, 2016 at 13:39
25

hexdump reveals it!

$ hexdump -cn 32 file.txt 
0000000   a   d   h   d  \n   a   d   s   l  \n   a   m   v   b  \n   a
0000010   o   v  \n   a   o   w  \n   a   r   o   b  \n   a   s   f   a
0000020

$ hexdump -cn 32 my-sorted.txt 
0000000   a  \n   a   a  \n   a   a   a  \n   a   a   d  \n   a   a   d
0000010   s  \n   a   a   f   j   e  \n   a   a   f   j   e   s  \n   a
0000020 

$ hexdump -cn 32 sorted-file.txt 
0000000   a  \r  \n   a   a  \r  \n   a   a   a  \r  \n   a   a   d  \r
0000010  \n   a   a   d   s  \r  \n   a   a   f   j   e  \r  \n   a   a
0000020   

Your sorted file is bigger because it uses Windows line endings \r\n (two bytes) instead of Linux line endings \n (one byte).

Could it be that you were running that command above under Windows using either tools like cygwin or this new Linux subsystem for Windows 10? Or did you maybe run something in Wine?

4
  • this new Windows Subsystem for Linux? bash is only one Linux program that runs in it; sort is not bash.
    – user253751
    Jul 11, 2016 at 2:36
  • @immibis You mean Linux subsystem for Windows? I meant that, but haven't been too interested in it myself yet, so did not try or research it further so far.
    – Byte Commander
    Jul 11, 2016 at 5:32
  • It is actually called the Windows Subsystem for Linux, but either one makes sense. (See how this would look with another subsystem: either "Windows Subsystem for Console [Applications]" or "Console [Application] Subsystem for Windows" makes sense)
    – user253751
    Jul 11, 2016 at 5:46
  • @immibis Aha, okay. You see I wasn't too interested in that specific topic yet. Forgive me, please :)
    – Byte Commander
    Jul 11, 2016 at 5:49

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .