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It is important to remember that when you assign a string constant
as the value of FS, it undergoes normal awk string
processing.  For example, with Unix awk and gawk,
the assignment ‘FS = "\.."’ assigns the character string ".."
to FS (the backslash is stripped).  This creates a regexp meaning
“fields are separated by occurrences of any two characters.”
If instead you want fields to be separated by a literal period followed
by any single character, use ‘FS = "\\.."’.
The following list summarizes how fields are split, based on the value
of FS (‘==’ means “is equal to”):
FS == " "Fields are separated by runs of whitespace. Leading and trailing whitespace are ignored. This is the default.
FS == any other single characterFields are separated by each occurrence of the character. Multiple successive occurrences delimit empty fields, as do leading and trailing occurrences. The character can even be a regexp metacharacter; it does not need to be escaped.
FS == regexpFields are separated by occurrences of characters that match regexp. Leading and trailing matches of regexp delimit empty fields.
FS == ""Each individual character in the record becomes a separate field. (This is a common extension; it is not specified by the POSIX standard.)
| FSandIGNORECASEThe  FS = "c" IGNORECASE = 1 $0 = "aCa" print $1 The output is ‘aCa’.  If you really want to split fields on an
alphabetic character while ignoring case, use a regexp that will
do it for you (e.g., ‘FS = "[c]"’).  In this case,  | 
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