Contents:
Cracking the Nut 
Four Ways to Skin a cat 
Using more to Page Through Files 
The "less" Pager: More than "more"
Page Through Compressed, RCS, Unprintable Files 
What's in That White Space? 
Show Non-Printing Characters with cat -v or od -c 
Finding File Types 
Adding and Deleting White Space 
Squash Extra Blank Lines 
crush: A cat that Skips all Blank Lines 
Double Space, Triple Space ... 
pushin: Squeeze Out Extra White Space 
How to Look at the End of a File: tail 
Finer Control on tail 
How to Look at a File as It Grows 
An Alias in Case You Don't Have tail 
Watching Several Files Grow 
Reverse Lines in Long Files with flip 
Printing the Top of a File 
Numbering Lines 
This chapter talks about the many ways of dumping a file to the screen. Most users know the brute force approach provided by cat ( 25.2 ) , but there's more to it than that:
Pagers like more ( 25.3 ) and less ( 25.4 ) that give you more control when looking through long files.
Looking at files that are compressed or otherwise unviewable (article 25.5 ).
Finding out what type of data a file contains before opening it (article 25.8 ).
Adding and deleting blank lines or other white space before displaying a file (articles 25.9 through 25.13 ).
Looking at just the beginning or just the end of a file (articles 25.14 through 25.20 ).
Numbering lines (article 25.21 ).
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