Search Results (Search, New, and Today's Topics) Animation Switch
Hey,
I added an animation switch on the search results page; so by default the thread previews are off, but if you want to look at them, just click on the green button and the thread previews will turn on (and back off).
Hi, I am a newbie at Unix scritping, and I have a question.
Looking at the search functionality on Unix. Here I have a structure
root---------dir1 ------- file1, file2, file3
|_____dir2 ______file1@, file4
|_____dir3_______file1@, file5
Under root directory, I... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm new to awk and I'm experiencing syntax error that I don't know how to resolve. Hopefully some experts in this forum can help me out.
I created an awk file that look like this:
$ cat myawk.awk
BEGIN {
VAR1=PATTERN1
VAR2=PATTERN2
}
/VAR1/ { flag=1 }
/VAR2/ { flag=0 }
{... (7 Replies)
Hello ,
When using vim, can ctag and cscope support recording search results and displaying the history results ? Once I jump to one tag, I can use :tnext to jump to next tag, but how can I display the preview search result? (0 Replies)
I am using GAWK to search for a specific pattern:
gawk '{IGNORECASE=1;} /<a href=/&&/\$/,/<\/a/' index.html
<a class=author href="http://washingtondc.craigslist.org/search/?areaID=10&amp;catAbb=sss&amp;query=ps vita" title="craigslist washington, DC | all fo
r sale / wanted search "ps... (1 Reply)
If I am searching for AA then then BB in a loop, how do I make the output always contain 6 columns of comma separated data even when there may only be 4 search matches?
AA11
AA12
AA13
AA14
BB11
BB12
BB13
BB14
BB15
BB16
Final output:
AA11,AA12,AA13,AA14,,,... (14 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am in search of unix command which can search a particular pattern in all files which are created/modified today ONLY. Which is the best way to achieve this?
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nakul_sh
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
apropos
APROPOS(1) BSD General Commands Manual APROPOS(1)NAME
apropos -- search the complete content of all man pages
SYNOPSIS
apropos [-123456789Ccp] [-n Number of results] [-S machine] [-s section] query
DESCRIPTION
The apropos utility performs a full text search over the complete content of all man pages. It uses the FTS engine of Sqlite to perform the
search. The database is created with the help of makemandb(8) utility.
This implementation of the apropos utility is more sophisticated than the classical version of apropos. Like modern search applications, it
uses advanced techniques like stemming and term weighting to rank the matching results in decreasing order of relevance. By default apropos
will only display the top 10 matches in the output.
Quotes are optional for specifying multiword queries.
It supports the following options:
-1 Search only within section 1 manual pages.
-2 Search only within section 2 manual pages.
-3 Search only within section 3 manual pages.
-4 Search only within section 4 manual pages.
-5 Search only within section 5 manual pages.
-6 Search only within section 6 manual pages.
-7 Search only within section 7 manual pages.
-8 Search only within section 8 manual pages.
-9 Search only within section 9 manual pages.
-C Do not show the context of the match.
-c Do show the context of the match (default).
-n Output up to the specified number of search results. The default limit is 10.
-p Display all matching results and pipe them through a pager (defaulting to more(1)).
-S machine
Limit the search to the pages for the specified machine architecture. By default pages for all architectures are shown in the search
results.
-s section
Restrict the search to the specified section of the manual. By default, pages from all section are shown. This option is for back-
wards compatibility with the classic version of apropos, using it is equivalent to using the [123456789] options directly.
FILES
/var/db/man.db The Sqlite FTS database which contains an index of the manual pages.
SEE ALSO man(1), whatis(1), makemandb(8)HISTORY
The apropos command appeared in 3.0BSD. It was rewritten in NetBSD 6.0 to support full text search using Sqlite.
AUTHORS
Abhinav Upadhyay
BSD April 21, 2012 BSD