| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] | 
if-else Statement 
The if-else statement is awk's decision-making
statement.  It looks like this:
if (condition) then-body [else else-body]  | 
The condition is an expression that controls what the rest of the
statement does.  If the condition is true, then-body is
executed; otherwise, else-body is executed.
The else part of the statement is
optional.  The condition is considered false if its value is zero or
the null string; otherwise the condition is true.
Refer to the following:
if (x % 2 == 0)
    print "x is even"
else
    print "x is odd"
 | 
In this example, if the expression `x % 2 == 0' is true (that is,
if the value of x is evenly divisible by two), then the first
print statement is executed; otherwise the second print
statement is executed.
If the else keyword appears on the same line as then-body and
then-body is not a compound statement (i.e., not surrounded by
curly braces), then a semicolon must separate then-body from
the else.
To illustrate this, the previous example can be rewritten as:
if (x % 2 == 0) print "x is even"; else
        print "x is odd"
 | 
If the `;' is left out, awk can't interpret the statement and
it produces a syntax error.  Don't actually write programs this way,
because a human reader might fail to see the else if it is not
the first thing on its line.