I use awk (33.11) a lot. One of my favorite features of awk is its associative arrays. This means awk can use anything as an index into an array. In the next example, I use the output of the file (25.8) command as the index into an array to count how many files there are of each type:
| ${*-.} xargs | 
#!/bin/sh
# usage: count_types [directory ...]
# Counts how many files there are of each type
# Original by Bruce Barnett
# Updated version by yu@math.duke.edu (Yunliang Yu)
find ${*-.} -type f -print | xargs file |
awk '{
        $1=NULL;
        t[$0]++;
} 
END {
        for (i in t) printf("%d\t%s\n", t[i], i);
}' | sort -nr   # Sort the result numerically, in reverse | 
|---|
The output of this might look like:
38 ascii text 32 English text 20 c program text 17 sparc executable not stripped 12 compressed data block compressed 16 bits 8 executable shell script 1 sparc demand paged dynamically linked executable 1 executable /bin/make script
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