A Practical Guide to UNIX System VThis bestselling work has been revised and updated to reflect the newest release of UNIX System V, Release 4.0. Expanded coverage includes networking, variables, control structures, signal handling, and other aspects of programming using the Bourne Shell. Two chapters on word processing contain "vi", the "nroff" text formatter, and "mm" macros. |
From inside the book
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Page 40
... Figure 2-8 shows Is listing the name of the practice file . Subsequent commands in Figure 2-8 display the contents of the file and remove the file . These com- mands are described below . $ Is practice $ cat practice vi ( visual ) is a ...
... Figure 2-8 shows Is listing the name of the practice file . Subsequent commands in Figure 2-8 display the contents of the file and remove the file . These com- mands are described below . $ Is practice $ cat practice vi ( visual ) is a ...
Page 103
... figure contrasts with Figure 5-6 , where both the standard input and standard output were associated with the terminal . In Figure 5-8 , only the input comes from the terminal . The redirect output symbol on the command line causes the ...
... figure contrasts with Figure 5-6 , where both the standard input and standard output were associated with the terminal . In Figure 5-8 , only the input comes from the terminal . The redirect output symbol on the command line causes the ...
Page 310
... FIGURE 9-1 Creating a Directory Stack You can display the contents of the stack using the dirs command . If you call dirs when the stack is empty , dirs puts the working directory on the top of the stack . 53 % dirs ~ / literature The ...
... FIGURE 9-1 Creating a Directory Stack You can display the contents of the stack using the dirs command . If you call dirs when the stack is empty , dirs puts the working directory on the top of the stack . 53 % dirs ~ / literature The ...
Contents
The UNIX Operating System | 3 |
How Can It Run on So Many Machines? | 10 |
Release 4 | 18 |
Copyright | |
75 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
access permissions alex argument Bourne Buffer Chapter chmod command line Command Mode contains CONTROL-D copy cpio create current line default delete delta disk echo editor enter execute exit Figure file called file system file-list following command following example format fsck give the command grep hard links header home directory home/alex input file Input Mode jenny Korn Shell line number login name macros mailx mand matches memo move the cursor nroff operating system option causes OPTIONAL Continued ordinary file password pathname press RETURN printer prompt regular expression screen Search String shell script simple filename sort SPACE special characters specify standard input standard output subdirectories Superuser symbolic link system administrator System V Release terminal UNIX operating system UNIX system uppercase utility displays versions write