table of contents
LOOK(1) | General Commands Manual | LOOK(1) |
NAME¶
look
— display
lines beginning with a given string
SYNOPSIS¶
look |
[-dfa ] [-t
termchar] string
[file] |
DESCRIPTION¶
The look
utility displays any lines in
file which contain string as a
prefix. As look
performs a binary search, the lines
in file must be sorted (where
sort(1) got the same options -d and/or -f that
look
is invoked with).
If file is not specified, the file /usr/share/dict/words is used, only alphanumeric characters are compared and the case of alphabetic characters is ignored.
Options:
-d
- Dictionary character set and order, i.e. only alphanumeric characters are compared. (On by default if no file specified).
-f
- Ignore the case of alphabetic characters. (On by default if no file specified).
-a
- Use the alternate dictionary /usr/share/dict/web2
-t
- Specify a string termination character, i.e. only the characters in string up to and including the first occurrence of termchar are compared.
The look
utility exits 0 if one or more
lines were found and displayed, 1 if no lines were found, and >1 if an
error occurred.
FILES¶
- /usr/share/dict/words
- the dictionary
- /usr/share/dict/web2
- the alternate dictionary
SEE ALSO¶
COMPATIBILITY¶
The original manual page stated that tabs and blank characters
participated in comparisons when the -d
option was
specified. This was incorrect and the current man page matches the historic
implementation.
HISTORY¶
Look
appeared in Version 7 AT&T
Unix.
AVAILABILITY¶
The look command is part of the util-linux-ng package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux-ng/.
June 14, 1993 | Linux 5.14.0-427.18.1.el9_4.x86_64 |