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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Strange results from 'strings | sort' Post 303038696 by edstevens on Wednesday 11th of September 2019 02:01:09 PM
Old 09-11-2019
OK, for the OS:


Code:
oracle:$ uname -a
Linux <redacted server>.<redacted domain> 3.8.13-118.4.2.el6uek.x86_64 #2 SMP Tue Mar 22 20:47:10 PDT 2016 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux


I'm not sure how to determine the exact version of 'sort'. The bottom of the man page shows this:


Code:
GNU coreutils 8.4

 

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LOOK(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   LOOK(1)

NAME
look - find lines in a sorted list SYNOPSIS
look [ -dfnixtc ] [ string ] [ file ] DESCRIPTION
Look consults a sorted file and prints all lines that begin with string. It uses binary search. The following options are recognized. Options dfnt affect comparisons as in sort(1). -i Interactive. There is no string argument; instead look takes lines from the standard input as strings to be looked up. -x Exact. Print only lines of the file whose key matches string exactly. -d `Directory' order: only letters, digits, tabs and blanks participate in comparisons. -f Fold. Upper case letters compare equal to lower case. -n Numeric comparison with initial string of digits, optional minus sign, and optional decimal point. -t[c] Character c terminates the sort key in the file. By default, tab terminates the key. If c is missing the entire line comprises the key. If no file is specified, /lib/words is assumed, with collating sequence df. FILES
/lib/words SOURCE
/src/cmd/look.c SEE ALSO
sort(1), grep(1) DIAGNOSTICS
The exit status is ``not found'' if no match is found, and ``no dictionary'' if file or the default dictionary cannot be opened. LOOK(1)
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