PG
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: 2001-04-25
NAME
pg - browse pagewise through text files
SYNOPSIS
pg
[-number]
[-p
string]
[-cefnrs]
[+line]
[+/pattern/]
[file...]
DESCRIPTION
Pg
displays a text file on a
CRT
one screenful at once.
After each page, a prompt is displayed. The user may then either press the
newline key to view the next page or one of the keys described below.
If no filename is given on the command line,
pg
reads from standard input.
If the standard output is not a terminal,
pg
acts like
cat(1)
but precedes each file with its name if there is more than one.
If input comes from a pipe,
pg
stores the data in a buffer file while reading
to make navigation possible.
OPTIONS
Pg
accepts the following options:
- -number
-
The number of lines per page. Usually, this is the number of
CRT
lines
minus one.
- -c
-
Clear the screen before a page is displayed
if the terminfo entry for the terminal provides this capability.
- -e
-
pg
will not pause and display
(EOF)
at the end of a file.
- -f
-
pg
does not split long lines.
- -n
-
Without this option, commands must be terminated by a newline character. With
this option,
pg
advances once a command letter is entered.
- -p string
-
Instead of the prompt
:
,
string
is displayed.
If
string
contains
%d
, its first occurrence is replaced by the number of the current page.
- -r
-
Disallow the shell escape.
- -s
-
Print messages in
standout
mode
if the terminfo entry for the terminal provides this capability.
- +number
-
Start at the given line.
- +/pattern/
-
Start at the line containing the Basic Regular Expression
pattern
given.
USAGE
The following commands may be entered at the prompt. Commands preceded by
i
in this document accept a number as argument, positive or negative.
If this argument starts with
+
or
-,
it is interpreted relative to the current position in the input file,
otherwise relative to the beginning.
- i<newline>
-
Display the next or the indicated page.
- id or ^D
-
Display the next halfpage. If
i
is given, it is always interpreted relative to the current position.
- il
-
Display the next or the indicated line.
- if
-
Skip a page forward.
i
must be a positive number and is always interpreted relative
to the current position.
- iw or iz
-
Behave as
<newline>
except that
i
becomes the new page size.
- . or ^L
-
Redraw the screen.
- $
-
Advance to the last line of the input file.
- i/pattern/
-
Search forward until the first or the i-th
occurrence of the Basic Regular Expression
pattern
is found. The search starts
after the current page and stops at the end of the file. No wrap-around is
performed.
i
must be a positive number.
- i?pattern? or i^pattern^
-
Search backward until the first or the i-th
occurrence of the Basic Regular Expression
pattern
is found. The search starts
before the current page and stops at the beginning of the file.
No wrap-around is performed.
i
must be a positive number.
The search commands accept an added letter. If
t
is given, the line containing the pattern is displayed at the top of the
screen, which is the default.
m
selects the middle and
b
the bottom of the screen.
The selected position is used in following searches, too.
- in
-
Advance to the next file or
i
files forward.
- ip
-
Reread the previous file or
i
files backward.
- s filename
-
Save the current file to the given
filename.
- h
-
Display a command summary.
- !command
-
Execute
command
using the shell.
- q or Q
-
Quit.
If the user presses the interrupt or quit key while
pg
reads from the
input file or writes on the terminal,
pg
will immediately display the prompt.
In all other situations these keys will terminate
pg.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables
affect the behaviour of
pg:
- COLUMNS
-
Overrides the system-supplied number of columns if set.
- LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES
-
See
locale(7).
- LINES
-
Overrides the system-supplied number of lines if set.
- SHELL
-
Used by the
!
command.
- TERM
-
Determines the terminal type.
SEE ALSO
cat(1),
more(1),
sh(1),
terminfo(5),
locale(7),
regex(7),
term(7)
NOTES
pg
expects the terminal tabulators to set on eight positions.
Files that include
NUL
characters cannot be displayed by
pg.
AVAILABILITY
The pg command is part of the util-linux-ng package and is available from
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux-ng/.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- USAGE
-
- ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- NOTES
-
- AVAILABILITY
-
This document was created by
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Time: 07:35:49 GMT, March 26, 2013