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csh(1)

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script(1)

sh(1)

environ(7)



MORE(1)                        1991                       MORE(1)


NAME
       more, page - file perusal filter for crt viewing

SYNOPSIS
       more  [  -cdflsu  ] [ -n ] [ +linenumber ] [ +/pattern ] [
       name ...  ]

       page more options

DESCRIPTION
       More is a filter which allows examination of a  continuous
       text  one screenful at a time on a soft-copy terminal.  It
       normally pauses after each screenful, printing --More-- at
       the  bottom  of  the  screen.   If  the  user then types a
       carriage return, one more line is displayed.  If the  user
       hits  a  space,  another  screenful  is  displayed.  Other
       possibilities are enumerated later.

       The command line options are:

       -n     An integer which is the  size  (in  lines)  of  the
              window  which more will use instead of the default.

       -c     More will draw each page by beginning at the top of
              the  screen  and  erasing  each line just before it
              draws on it.  This  avoids  scrolling  the  screen,
              making  it  easier  to  read while more is writing.
              This option will be ignored if  the  terminal  does
              not have the ability to clear to the end of a line.

       -d     More will prompt the user with the  message  "Press
              space to continue, 'q' to quit." at the end of each
              screenful, and will respond to  subsequent  illegal
              user    input    by   printing   "Press   'h'   for
              instructions." instead of ringing the  bell.   This
              is useful if more is being used as a filter in some
              setting, such as a class, where many users  may  be
              unsophisticated.

       -f     This  causes  more  to  count  logical, rather than
              screen lines.  That is, long lines are not  folded.
              This option is recommended if nroff output is being
              piped through ul, since  the  latter  may  generate
              escape  sequences.   These escape sequences contain
              characters which  would  ordinarily  occupy  screen
              positions,  but  which  do  not print when they are
              sent to the terminal as part of an escape sequence.
              Thus more may think that lines are longer than they
              actually are, and fold lines erroneously.

       -l     Do not treat ^L (form  feed)  specially.   If  this
              option is not given, more will pause after any line
              that contains a ^L, as if the end  of  a  screenful
              had  been  reached.   Also, if a file begins with a



18,                           April                             1




MORE(1)                        1991                       MORE(1)


              form feed, the screen will be  cleared  before  the
              file is printed.

       -s     Squeeze  multiple  blank  lines  from  the  output,
              producing only one blank line.  Especially  helpful
              when  viewing  nroff  output, this option maximizes
              the useful information present on the screen.

       -u     Normally, more  will  handle  underlining  such  as
              produced  by  nroff  in a manner appropriate to the
              particular terminal:  if the terminal  can  perform
              underlining  or  has  a  stand-out  mode, more will
              output  appropriate  escape  sequences  to   enable
              underlining   or   stand-out  mode  for  underlined
              information in the  source  file.   The  -u  option
              suppresses this processing.

       +linenumber
              Start up at linenumber.

       +/pattern
              Start  up  two lines before the line containing the
              regular expression pattern.

       If the program is invoked as  page,  then  the  screen  is
       cleared  before  each  screenful is printed (but only if a
       full screenful is being printed), and k - 1 rather than  k
       -  2  lines  are printed in each screenful, where k is the
       number of lines the terminal can display.

       More looks in the file /etc/termcap to determine  terminal
       characteristics, and to determine the default window size.
       On a terminal capable of displaying 24 lines, the  default
       window size is 22 lines.

       More looks in the environment variable MORE to pre-set any
       flags desired.  For example, if you prefer to  view  files
       using  the  -c  mode  of operation, the csh command setenv
       MORE -c or the sh command sequence MORE='-c' ; export MORE
       would   cause   all   invocations   of  more  ,  including
       invocations by programs such as man and msgs , to use this
       mode.   Normally, the user will place the command sequence
       which sets up the MORE environment variable in the  .cshrc
       or .profile file.

       If more is reading from a file, rather than a pipe, then a
       percentage is displayed along with  the  --More--  prompt.
       This  gives  the  fraction of the file (in characters, not
       lines) that has been read so far.

       Other sequences which may be typed when more  pauses,  and
       their  effects,  are  as follows (i is an optional integer
       argument, defaulting to 1) :




18,                           April                             2




MORE(1)                        1991                       MORE(1)


       i<space>
              display i more lines, (or another screenful  if  no
              argument is given)


       ^D     display  11  more  lines  (a  ``scroll'').  If i is
              given, then the scroll size is set to i.


       d      same as ^D (control-D)


       iz     same as typing a space except that i,  if  present,
              becomes the new window size.


       is     skip i lines and print a screenful of lines


       if     skip i screenfuls and print a screenful of lines


       ib     skip  back  i  screenfuls  and print a screenful of
              lines


       i^B    same as b


       q or Q Exit from more.


       =      Display the current line number.


       v      Start up the editor vi at the current line.


       h      Help command; give a description of  all  the  more
              commands.


       i/expr search  for  the  i-th  occurrence  of  the regular
              expression  expr.   If  there  are  less   than   i
              occurrences  of  expr,  and  the  input  is  a file
              (rather than a pipe), then the position in the file
              remains   unchanged.   Otherwise,  a  screenful  is
              displayed, starting  two  lines  before  the  place
              where  the  expression was found.  The user's erase
              and kill characters may be used to edit the regular
              expression.   Erasing  back  past  the first column
              cancels the search command.





18,                           April                             3




MORE(1)                        1991                       MORE(1)


       in     search for the i-th occurrence of the last  regular
              expression entered.


       '      (single  quote) Go to the point from which the last
              search started.  If no search has been performed in
              the  current  file,  this  command goes back to the
              beginning of the file.


       !command
              invoke a shell with command.   The  characters  `%'
              and  `!' in "command" are replaced with the current
              file  name   and   the   previous   shell   command
              respectively.   If  there  is no current file name,
              `%' is not expanded.  The sequences "\%"  and  "\!"
              are replaced by "%" and "!" respectively.


       i:n    skip  to  the  i-th  next file given in the command
              line (skips to last file if n doesn't make sense)


       i:p    skip to the i-th previous file given in the command
              line.   If  this  command is given in the middle of
              printing out a file, then more  goes  back  to  the
              beginning  of  the  file.  If i doesn't make sense,
              more skips back to the first file.  If more is  not
              reading  from  a file, the bell is rung and nothing
              else happens.


       :f     display the current file name and line number.


       :q or :Q
              exit from more (same as q or Q).


       .      (dot) repeat the previous command.

       The commands take effect  immediately,  i.e.,  it  is  not
       necessary  to type a carriage return.  Up to the time when
       the command character itself is given, the  user  may  hit
       the  line  kill character to cancel the numerical argument
       being formed.  In addition, the user  may  hit  the  erase
       character to redisplay the --More--(xx%) message.

       At any time when output is being sent to the terminal, the
       user can hit the quit key (normally control-\).  More will
       stop  sending  output, and will display the usual --More--
       prompt.  The user may then enter one of the above commands
       in  the normal manner.  Unfortunately, some output is lost
       when this is done, due to the  fact  that  any  characters



18,                           April                             4




MORE(1)                        1991                       MORE(1)


       waiting  in  the  terminal's output queue are flushed when
       the quit signal occurs.

       The terminal is set to noecho mode by this program so that
       the output can be continuous.  What you type will thus not
       show on your terminal, except for the / and !  commands.

       If the standard output is not a teletype, then  more  acts
       just like cat, except that a header is printed before each
       file (if there is more than one).

       A sample usage of more in previewing nroff output would be

            nroff -ms +2 doc.n | more -s

FILES
       /etc/termcap        Terminal data base
       /usr/lib/more.help  Help file

SEE ALSO
       csh(1), man(1), msgs(1), script(1), sh(1), environ(7)

BUGS
       Skipping backwards is too slow on large files.

































18,                           April                             5


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