"less" is More (Unix Power Tools, 3rd Edition)
12.3. "less" is More
The most
popular pager for Unix systems was once the more
command, so named because it gave you "one more
screen." more is ubiquitous, but
also somewhat limited in its capability. The
less command (so named because, of course,
"less is more!") is more commonly
used. less is a full-featured text pager that
emulates more but offers an extended set of
capabilities.
One particularly important feature of less is that
it does not read all of its input before starting, which makes it
faster than an editor for large input. less also
offers many useful features and is available for almost every
operating environment. As an extra bonus, it is installed by default
on most free Unixes.
less begins execution by first examining the
environment in which it is running. It needs to know some things
about the terminal (or window) in which its output will be displayed.
Once that's known, less formats
the text and displays the first screen's output. The
last line of the screen is reserved for user interaction with the
program. less will display a colon (:) on the
first column of the last line and leave the cursor there. This colon
is a command prompt, awaiting command input from the user. Most
commands to less are single-character entries, and
less will act upon them immediately and without a
subsequent carriage return (this is known as
cbreak mode). The most basic command to
less (and more) is a single
space, which instructs the pager to move ahead in the text by one
screen. Table 12-1 lists commonly used
less commands.
Table 12-1. Commonly used less commands
Command
Description
Space
Scroll forward one screen.
d
Scroll forward one-half screen.
RETURN
Scroll forward one line.
b
Scroll backward one screen. Unlike more, while
less is reading from pipes (Section 1.5), it can
redraw the screen and read previous pages.
u
Scroll backward one-half screen.
y
Scroll backward one line.
g
Go to the beginning of the text (could be slow with large amounts of
text).
G
Go to the end of the text (could be slow with large amounts of text).
/pattern
Search forward for pattern, which can be a
regular expression.
?pattern
Search backward for pattern, which can be
a regular expression.
n
Search for the next occurance of the last search, in the same
direction: forward in the file if the previous search was using
/ and backwards in the file if the previous search
was using ?.
N
Search for the previous occurance of the last search. See earlier.
h
Display a help screen.
:n
Display next file from command line (two-character command).
:p
Display previous file from command line (two-character command).
less has a rich command set, and its behavior can
be modified as needed for your use. The lesskey
program lets you make custom key definitions, and you can store your
favorite setup options in the LESS environment variable (Section 35.3). See the less manpage for
further details.
One of the big advantages of less is that it
doesn't require any relearning;
less does the right thing when you use
more, vi (Section 17.2), or emacs
(Section 19.1) file-browsing commands. Incidentally,
it also protects you from terminal control sequences and other
obnoxious things that happen when you try to view a binary file,
because it escapes nonprinting
characters (Section 12.4).
-- JD
12.2. What Good Is a cat?12.4. Show Nonprinting Characters with cat -v or od -c
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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