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Full Discussion: Changing Man page output
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Changing Man page output Post 302432641 by Opy99 on Friday 25th of June 2010 03:30:54 PM
Old 06-25-2010
Sorry about the ambiguity. Normally, when you execute the man command, the output is displayed one page at a time. I do not want the output of the man command to be displayed by pages but, instead, continously scroll, what command option would I use to do this?

This is for an intro UNIX class, so I don't think they want us changing variables at this time. (I could be wrong though).
 

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INTRO(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  INTRO(1)

NAME
intro -- introduction to general commands (tools and utilities) DESCRIPTION
Section one of the manual contains most of the commands which comprise the BSD user environment. Some of the commands included in section one are text editors, command shell interpreters, searching and sorting tools, file manipulation commands, system status commands, remote file copy commands, mail commands, compilers and compiler tools, formatted output tools, and line printer commands. All commands set a status value upon exit which may be tested to see if the command completed normally. Traditionally, the value 0 signifies successful completion of the command, while a value >0 indicates an error. Some commands attempt to describe the nature of the failure by using exit codes as defined in sysexits(3), while others simply set the status to an arbitrary value >0 (typically 1). SEE ALSO
apropos(1), man(1), intro(2), intro(3), sysexits(3), intro(4), intro(5), intro(6), intro(7), security(7), intro(8), intro(9) Tutorials in the UNIX User's Manual Supplementary Documents. HISTORY
The intro manual page appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BSD
October 21, 2001 BSD
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