nl(1)
nl --
number lines
Synopsis
nl [-btype] [-ftype] [-htype] [-vstart#] [-iincr] [-p] [-lnum]
[-ssep] [-wwidth] [-nformat] [-ddelim] [file]
Description
nl
reads lines from the named file, or the
standard input if no file is named, and
reproduces the lines on the standard output.
Lines are numbered on the left in accordance with
the command options in effect.
nl processes supplementary code set characters
according to the locale specified in the LC_CTYPE
environment variable (see LANG on
environ(5)),
except as noted below.
In regular expressions, pattern searches are performed
on characters, not bytes, as described on
grep(1).
nl
views the text it reads in terms of logical pages.
Line numbering is reset at the start
of each logical page.
A logical page consists of a
header, a body, and a footer section.
Empty sections are valid.
Different line numbering options
are independently available
for header, body, and footer.
For example, -bt (the default)
numbers non-blank lines in the body section and does
not number any lines in the header and footer sections.
The start of logical page sections are signaled by input
lines containing nothing but the following delimiter character(s):
Line contents-
Start of
\:\:\:-
header
\:\:-
body
\:-
footer
Unless optioned otherwise,
nl
assumes the text being read is in a single logical page body.
Command options may appear in any order and
may be intermingled with an optional file name.
Only one file may be named.
If POSIX2 is in the environment, then there is no default value for the options
-b, -f, -h, -v, -i, -l, -s, -w, -n or -d.
If the value isn't immediately after the option variable,
then it is the next argument.
The options are:
-btype-
Specifies which logical page body lines are to be numbered.
Recognized types and their meanings are:
a-
number all lines
t-
number lines with printable text only
n-
do not number lines
pexp-
number only lines that contain the basic regular expression
(BRE)
exp (see
grep(1))
Default type for logical page body is
t
(text lines numbered).
All supplementary code set characters are considered printable.
-ftype-
Same as
-btype
except for footer.
Default type for logical page footer is n
(no lines numbered).
All supplementary code set characters are considered printable.
-htype-
Same as
-btype
except for header.
Default type for logical page header is n
(no lines numbered).
All supplementary code set characters are considered printable.
-vstart#-
start#
is the initial value used to
number logical page lines.
Default start# is
1.
-iincr-
incr
is the increment value used
to number logical page lines.
Default incr is
1.
-p-
Do not restart numbering at logical page delimiters.
-lnum-
num
is the number of blank lines to be
considered as one.
For example,
-l2
results in only the second adjacent blank
being numbered (if the appropriate
-ha,
-ba,
and/or
-fa
option is set).
Default num is
1.
-ssep-
sep
is the character(s) used in
separating the line number and the
corresponding text line.
Default sep is a tab.
sep must be a single-byte character or characters.
-wwidth-
width
is the number of characters
to be used for the line number.
Default width is
6.
The maximum for width is 100.
If a number greater than the maximum is specified for width,
the maximum is automatically used.
-nformat-
format
is the line numbering format.
Recognized values are:
ln,
left justified, leading zeroes
suppressed;
rn,
right justified,
leading zeroes suppressed;
rz,
right justified, leading zeroes kept.
Default format is rn (right justified).
-ddelim-
The two delimiter characters specifying the start of a logical page
section may be changed from the default characters (``\:'') to
two user-specified characters.
If only one character is entered,
the second character remains the default character (:).
No space should appear between the
-d
and the delimiter characters.
To enter a backslash, use two backslashes.
delim must be a single-byte character or characters.
Examples
The command:
nl -v10 -i10 -d!+ file1
will cause the first line of the page body to be numbered 10,
the second line of the page body to be numbered 20,
the third 30, and so forth.
The logical page delimiters are ``!+''.
Files
/usr/lib/locale/locale/LC_MESSAGES/uxdfm-
language-specific message file (See LANG on
environ(5).)
References
ed(1),
pr(1)
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004