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Full Discussion: commands in the terminal
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting commands in the terminal Post 302408496 by bakunin on Monday 29th of March 2010 04:23:27 PM
Old 03-29-2010
I suggest you enter "man grep" into your terminal and study the man page of the grep-utility. Further i suggest you prepare little files with lines that should and should not be matched and play with them to become familiar with with the utility.

You will soon (you come across very intelligent, so i'm sure it will be very very soon) be able to answer your questions yourself and maybe even be able to help others here, who are not quite so quick-witted. Good luck and hope to see you soon contributing here.

I will close here now to give you the necessary silence for your study.

bakunin
 

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sagasu(1)																 sagasu(1)

NAME
sagasu - GNOME tool to find strings in multiple files SYNOPSIS
sagasu [string [dir]] DESCRIPTION
sagasu is a GNOME tool to find strings in a set of files. The user specifies the search directory and the set of files to be searched. Double-clicking on a search result launches a user command that can for example load the file in an editor at the appropriate line. The search can recurse into subdirectories and can optionally ignore CVS directories. Two optional command-line arguments can be given: the first is the initial search string and the second is the directory whose files will be searched. If only one argument is given, it is taken as the search string. No search is actually started, but the appropriate fields are initialized. Any subsequent arguments are ignored. More documentation is available through the application's Help menu. OPTIONS
--help display a help page and exit --version display version information and exit LICENSE
This program is free software; you may redistribute it under the terms of the GNU General Public License. This program has absolutely no warranty. AUTHOR
Pierre Sarrazin See the Sagasu Home Page: http://sarrazip.com/dev/sagasu.html BUGS
The files to be searches are still assumed to be in Latin-1, not in UTF-8. The same goes for the command-line arguments and the terminal to which Sagasu is connected, if applicable. HISTORY
Sagasu is a Japanese word that means "to search." June 19th, 2010 sagasu(1)
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