nl (Unix)
Operating system | Unix and Unix-like |
---|---|
Platform | Cross-platform |
Type | Command |
License | coreutils: GPLv3+ |
nl is a Unix utility for numbering lines, either from a file or from standard input, reproducing output on standard output.
History
[edit]nl
is part of the X/Open Portability Guide since issue 2 of 1987. It was inherited into the first version of POSIX.1 and the Single Unix Specification.[1] It first appeared in System V release 2.[2]
The version of nl
bundled in GNU coreutils was written by Scott Bartram and David MacKenzie.[3]
The command is available as a separate package for Microsoft Windows as part of the UnxUtils collection of native Win32 ports of common GNU Unix-like utilities.[4]
Syntax
[edit]The command has a number of switches:
- a - number all lines
- t - number lines with printable text only
- n - no line numbering
- string - number only those lines containing the regular expression defined in the string supplied.
The default applied switch is t.
nl also supports some command line options.
Example
[edit] $ nl tf
1 echo press cr
2 read cr
3 done
The following example numbers only the lines that begin with a capital letter A (matching on the regular expression /^A/). filename is optional.
$ nl -b p^A filename
apple
1 Apple
BANANA
2 Allspice
strawberry
It can be useful as an alternative to grep -n:
$ cat somefile
aaaa
bbbb
cccc
dddc
$ nl somefile | grep cccc
3 cccc
See also
[edit]- wc (Unix) – the word count command
- cat (Unix) – concatenate command (-n flag is equivalent to nl -a)
- List of Unix commands
References
[edit]- ^ The Single UNIX Specification, Version 4 from The Open Group – Shell and Utilities Reference,
- ^ FreeBSD General Commands Manual –
- ^ Linux General Commands Manual –
- ^ "Native Win32 ports of some GNU utilities". unxutils.sourceforge.net.