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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Pipes with the < and >> meanings. Post 302517436 by mirni on Tuesday 26th of April 2011 06:58:02 PM
Old 04-26-2011
wow... what a thorough explanation. Maybe DGPickett's reply should be archived as a tutorial of sorts?
 

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TRANSLATE(1)                                                  General Commands Manual                                                 TRANSLATE(1)

NAME
translate - looks up for words in a dictionary SYNOPSIS
translate [options] words DESCRIPTION
translate looks up for words in a dictionary and translates them. It can handle multiple dictionaries and charsets. It comes with an eng- lish-german dictionary and is able to translate in both directions. OPTIONS
-n non-interactive (don't prompt if no matches found) -i invers lookup (from second to first language) -l languages to translate between -v display version and exit -w searches only whole words -h display help EXAMPLE
translate -l en-de simplest SEE ALSO
xtranslate FILES
translate preferred language and is stored in /etc/translate.conf You can store your private configuration file in ~/.translate. If there are no options in the commandline it uses the default values de-en. It can also create a private dictionary in ~/.translate AUTHOR
Jochem Huhmann <jochem@revier.com> wrote translate. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by oth- ers). TRANSLATE(1)
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