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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Check for difference in output of 2 commands? Post 302489781 by turbofayce on Friday 21st of January 2011 03:28:55 PM
Old 01-21-2011
Check for difference in output of 2 commands?

Hello! I'm just learning the shell, and I would really like to know how to do this:

Given these 2 commands:

ls -l

ls -le

How can I, with a one-liner, ask the shell to show me visually in the shell, what the difference is between the output of the two commands? They look the same to me and I would like the shell to report the difference, if any.

I hope that makes sense. I think this is probably something basic but seems to be a very powerful procedure for future use in comparing other outputs. I don't think I need python for this, which I don't know at all, but it seems like this is a pipe-able procedure within the shell...?

Thank you for your assistance and expertise, TF
 

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shell(1F)							   FMLI Commands							 shell(1F)

NAME
shell - run a command using shell SYNOPSIS
shell command [command] ... DESCRIPTION
The shell function concatenate its arguments, separating each by a space, and passes this string to the shell ($SHELL if set, otherwise /usr/bin/sh). EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample output of shell command. Since the Form and Menu Language does not directly support background processing, the shell function can be used instead. `shell "build prog > /dev/null &"` If you want the user to continue to be able to interact with the application while the background job is running, the output of an exe- cutable run by shell in the background must be redirected: to a file if you want to save the output, or to /dev/null if you don't want to save it (or if there is no output), otherwise your application may appear to be hung until the background job finishes processing. shell can also be used to execute a command that has the same name as an FMLI built-in function. NOTES
The arguments to shell will be concatenate using spaces, which may or may not do what is expected. The variables set in local environments will not be expanded by the shell because "local" means "local to the current process." ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
sh(1), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 5 Jul 1990 shell(1F)
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