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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Interpretation of UNIX command Post 302982080 by RudiC on Friday 23rd of September 2016 05:40:48 AM
Old 09-23-2016
The first pipe is an expensive (and error prone) way to mimic the behaviour of ls *; not sure what it should be good for.
wc -l yields the count of lines, not words.
Please note that options to any command are introduced by a - (minus sign), NOT a (Unicode U+2014, "EM DASH") character which leads to a syntax error.

Last edited by RudiC; 09-23-2016 at 08:39 AM..
 

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REPERTOIREMAP(5)						 Linux User Manual						  REPERTOIREMAP(5)

NAME
repertoiremap - map symbolic character names to Unicode code points DESCRIPTION
A repertoire map defines mappings between symbolic character names and Unicode code points when compiling a locale with localedef(1). Using a repertoire map is optional, it is needed only when symbolic names are used instead of now preferred Unicode code points. Syntax The repertoiremap file starts with a header that may consist of the following keywords: <comment_char> is followed by a character that will be used as the comment character for the rest of the file. It defaults to the number sign (#). <escape_char> is followed by a character that should be used as the escape character for the rest of the file to mark characters that should be interpreted in a special way. It defaults to the backslash (). The mapping section starts with the keyword CHARIDS in the first column. The mapping lines have the following form: <symbolic-name> <code-point> <comment> This defines exactly one mapping, <comment> being optional. The mapping section ends with the string END CHARIDS. FILES
/usr/share/i18n/repertoiremaps Usual default repertoire map path. CONFORMING TO
POSIX.2. NOTES
Repertoire maps are deprecated in favor of Unicode code points. SEE ALSO
locale(1), localedef(1), charmap(5), locale(5) GNU
2014-06-02 REPERTOIREMAP(5)
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