1LESS(1) General Commands Manual LESS(1)
2
3
4
6 less - opposite of more
7
9 less -?
10 less --help
11 less -V
12 less --version
13 less [-[+]aABcCdeEfFgGiIJKLmMnNqQrRsSuUVwWX~]
14 [-b space] [-h lines] [-j line] [-k keyfile]
15 [-{oO} logfile] [-p pattern] [-P prompt] [-t tag]
16 [-T tagsfile] [-x tab,...] [-y lines] [-[z] lines]
17 [-# shift] [+[+]cmd] [--] [filename]...
18 (See the OPTIONS section for alternate option syntax with long option
19 names.)
20
21
23 Less is a program similar to more (1), but which allows backward move‐
24 ment in the file as well as forward movement. Also, less does not have
25 to read the entire input file before starting, so with large input
26 files it starts up faster than text editors like vi (1). Less uses
27 termcap (or terminfo on some systems), so it can run on a variety of
28 terminals. There is even limited support for hardcopy terminals. (On
29 a hardcopy terminal, lines which should be printed at the top of the
30 screen are prefixed with a caret.)
31
32 Commands are based on both more and vi. Commands may be preceded by a
33 decimal number, called N in the descriptions below. The number is used
34 by some commands, as indicated.
35
36
38 In the following descriptions, ^X means control-X. ESC stands for the
39 ESCAPE key; for example ESC-v means the two character sequence
40 "ESCAPE", then "v".
41
42 h or H Help: display a summary of these commands. If you forget all
43 the other commands, remember this one.
44
45 SPACE or ^V or f or ^F
46 Scroll forward N lines, default one window (see option -z
47 below). If N is more than the screen size, only the final
48 screenful is displayed. Warning: some systems use ^V as a spe‐
49 cial literalization character.
50
51 z Like SPACE, but if N is specified, it becomes the new window
52 size.
53
54 ESC-SPACE
55 Like SPACE, but scrolls a full screenful, even if it reaches
56 end-of-file in the process.
57
58 ENTER or RETURN or ^N or e or ^E or j or ^J
59 Scroll forward N lines, default 1. The entire N lines are dis‐
60 played, even if N is more than the screen size.
61
62 d or ^D
63 Scroll forward N lines, default one half of the screen size. If
64 N is specified, it becomes the new default for subsequent d and
65 u commands.
66
67 b or ^B or ESC-v
68 Scroll backward N lines, default one window (see option -z
69 below). If N is more than the screen size, only the final
70 screenful is displayed.
71
72 w Like ESC-v, but if N is specified, it becomes the new window
73 size.
74
75 y or ^Y or ^P or k or ^K
76 Scroll backward N lines, default 1. The entire N lines are dis‐
77 played, even if N is more than the screen size. Warning: some
78 systems use ^Y as a special job control character.
79
80 u or ^U
81 Scroll backward N lines, default one half of the screen size.
82 If N is specified, it becomes the new default for subsequent d
83 and u commands.
84
85 J Like j, but continues to scroll beyond the end of the file.
86
87 K or Y Like k, but continues to scroll beyond the beginning of the
88 file.
89
90 ESC-) or RIGHTARROW
91 Scroll horizontally right N characters, default half the screen
92 width (see the -# option). If a number N is specified, it
93 becomes the default for future RIGHTARROW and LEFTARROW com‐
94 mands. While the text is scrolled, it acts as though the -S
95 option (chop lines) were in effect.
96
97 ESC-( or LEFTARROW
98 Scroll horizontally left N characters, default half the screen
99 width (see the -# option). If a number N is specified, it
100 becomes the default for future RIGHTARROW and LEFTARROW com‐
101 mands.
102
103 ESC-} or ^RIGHTARROW
104 Scroll horizontally right to show the end of the longest dis‐
105 played line.
106
107 ESC-{ or ^LEFTARROW
108 Scroll horizontally left back to the first column.
109
110 r or ^R or ^L
111 Repaint the screen.
112
113 R Repaint the screen, discarding any buffered input. Useful if
114 the file is changing while it is being viewed.
115
116 F Scroll forward, and keep trying to read when the end of file is
117 reached. Normally this command would be used when already at
118 the end of the file. It is a way to monitor the tail of a file
119 which is growing while it is being viewed. (The behavior is
120 similar to the "tail -f" command.)
121
122 ESC-F Like F, but as soon as a line is found which matches the last
123 search pattern, the terminal bell is rung and forward scrolling
124 stops.
125
126 g or < or ESC-<
127 Go to line N in the file, default 1 (beginning of file). (Warn‐
128 ing: this may be slow if N is large.)
129
130 G or > or ESC->
131 Go to line N in the file, default the end of the file. (Warn‐
132 ing: this may be slow if N is large, or if N is not specified
133 and standard input, rather than a file, is being read.)
134
135 ESC-G Same as G, except if no number N is specified and the input is
136 standard input, goes to the last line which is currently
137 buffered.
138
139 p or % Go to a position N percent into the file. N should be between 0
140 and 100, and may contain a decimal point.
141
142 P Go to the line containing byte offset N in the file.
143
144 { If a left curly bracket appears in the top line displayed on the
145 screen, the { command will go to the matching right curly
146 bracket. The matching right curly bracket is positioned on the
147 bottom line of the screen. If there is more than one left curly
148 bracket on the top line, a number N may be used to specify the
149 N-th bracket on the line.
150
151 } If a right curly bracket appears in the bottom line displayed on
152 the screen, the } command will go to the matching left curly
153 bracket. The matching left curly bracket is positioned on the
154 top line of the screen. If there is more than one right curly
155 bracket on the top line, a number N may be used to specify the
156 N-th bracket on the line.
157
158 ( Like {, but applies to parentheses rather than curly brackets.
159
160 ) Like }, but applies to parentheses rather than curly brackets.
161
162 [ Like {, but applies to square brackets rather than curly brack‐
163 ets.
164
165 ] Like }, but applies to square brackets rather than curly brack‐
166 ets.
167
168 ESC-^F Followed by two characters, acts like {, but uses the two char‐
169 acters as open and close brackets, respectively. For example,
170 "ESC ^F < >" could be used to go forward to the > which matches
171 the < in the top displayed line.
172
173 ESC-^B Followed by two characters, acts like }, but uses the two char‐
174 acters as open and close brackets, respectively. For example,
175 "ESC ^B < >" could be used to go backward to the < which matches
176 the > in the bottom displayed line.
177
178 m Followed by any lowercase or uppercase letter, marks the first
179 displayed line with that letter. If the status column is
180 enabled via the -J option, the status column shows the marked
181 line.
182
183 M Acts like m, except the last displayed line is marked rather
184 than the first displayed line.
185
186 ' (Single quote.) Followed by any lowercase or uppercase letter,
187 returns to the position which was previously marked with that
188 letter. Followed by another single quote, returns to the posi‐
189 tion at which the last "large" movement command was executed.
190 Followed by a ^ or $, jumps to the beginning or end of the file
191 respectively. Marks are preserved when a new file is examined,
192 so the ' command can be used to switch between input files.
193
194 ^X^X Same as single quote.
195
196 ESC-m Followed by any lowercase or uppercase letter, clears the mark
197 identified by that letter.
198
199 /pattern
200 Search forward in the file for the N-th line containing the pat‐
201 tern. N defaults to 1. The pattern is a regular expression, as
202 recognized by the regular expression library supplied by your
203 system. The search starts at the first line displayed (but see
204 the -a and -j options, which change this).
205
206 Certain characters are special if entered at the beginning of
207 the pattern; they modify the type of search rather than become
208 part of the pattern:
209
210 ^N or !
211 Search for lines which do NOT match the pattern.
212
213 ^E or *
214 Search multiple files. That is, if the search reaches
215 the END of the current file without finding a match, the
216 search continues in the next file in the command line
217 list.
218
219 ^F or @
220 Begin the search at the first line of the FIRST file in
221 the command line list, regardless of what is currently
222 displayed on the screen or the settings of the -a or -j
223 options.
224
225 ^K Highlight any text which matches the pattern on the cur‐
226 rent screen, but don't move to the first match (KEEP cur‐
227 rent position).
228
229 ^R Don't interpret regular expression metacharacters; that
230 is, do a simple textual comparison.
231
232 ?pattern
233 Search backward in the file for the N-th line containing the
234 pattern. The search starts at the last line displayed (but see
235 the -a and -j options, which change this).
236
237 Certain characters are special as in the / command:
238
239 ^N or !
240 Search for lines which do NOT match the pattern.
241
242 ^E or *
243 Search multiple files. That is, if the search reaches
244 the beginning of the current file without finding a
245 match, the search continues in the previous file in the
246 command line list.
247
248 ^F or @
249 Begin the search at the last line of the last file in the
250 command line list, regardless of what is currently dis‐
251 played on the screen or the settings of the -a or -j
252 options.
253
254 ^K As in forward searches.
255
256 ^R As in forward searches.
257
258 ESC-/pattern
259 Same as "/*".
260
261 ESC-?pattern
262 Same as "?*".
263
264 n Repeat previous search, for N-th line containing the last pat‐
265 tern. If the previous search was modified by ^N, the search is
266 made for the N-th line NOT containing the pattern. If the pre‐
267 vious search was modified by ^E, the search continues in the
268 next (or previous) file if not satisfied in the current file.
269 If the previous search was modified by ^R, the search is done
270 without using regular expressions. There is no effect if the
271 previous search was modified by ^F or ^K.
272
273 N Repeat previous search, but in the reverse direction.
274
275 ESC-n Repeat previous search, but crossing file boundaries. The
276 effect is as if the previous search were modified by *.
277
278 ESC-N Repeat previous search, but in the reverse direction and cross‐
279 ing file boundaries.
280
281 ESC-u Undo search highlighting. Turn off highlighting of strings
282 matching the current search pattern. If highlighting is already
283 off because of a previous ESC-u command, turn highlighting back
284 on. Any search command will also turn highlighting back on.
285 (Highlighting can also be disabled by toggling the -G option; in
286 that case search commands do not turn highlighting back on.)
287
288 &pattern
289 Display only lines which match the pattern; lines which do not
290 match the pattern are not displayed. If pattern is empty (if
291 you type & immediately followed by ENTER), any filtering is
292 turned off, and all lines are displayed. While filtering is in
293 effect, an ampersand is displayed at the beginning of the
294 prompt, as a reminder that some lines in the file may be hidden.
295
296 Certain characters are special as in the / command:
297
298 ^N or !
299 Display only lines which do NOT match the pattern.
300
301 ^R Don't interpret regular expression metacharacters; that
302 is, do a simple textual comparison.
303
304 :e [filename]
305 Examine a new file. If the filename is missing, the "current"
306 file (see the :n and :p commands below) from the list of files
307 in the command line is re-examined. A percent sign (%) in the
308 filename is replaced by the name of the current file. A pound
309 sign (#) is replaced by the name of the previously examined
310 file. However, two consecutive percent signs are simply
311 replaced with a single percent sign. This allows you to enter a
312 filename that contains a percent sign in the name. Similarly,
313 two consecutive pound signs are replaced with a single pound
314 sign. The filename is inserted into the command line list of
315 files so that it can be seen by subsequent :n and :p commands.
316 If the filename consists of several files, they are all inserted
317 into the list of files and the first one is examined. If the
318 filename contains one or more spaces, the entire filename should
319 be enclosed in double quotes (also see the -" option).
320
321 ^X^V or E
322 Same as :e. Warning: some systems use ^V as a special literal‐
323 ization character. On such systems, you may not be able to use
324 ^V.
325
326 :n Examine the next file (from the list of files given in the com‐
327 mand line). If a number N is specified, the N-th next file is
328 examined.
329
330 :p Examine the previous file in the command line list. If a number
331 N is specified, the N-th previous file is examined.
332
333 :x Examine the first file in the command line list. If a number N
334 is specified, the N-th file in the list is examined.
335
336 :d Remove the current file from the list of files.
337
338 t Go to the next tag, if there were more than one matches for the
339 current tag. See the -t option for more details about tags.
340
341 T Go to the previous tag, if there were more than one matches for
342 the current tag.
343
344 = or ^G or :f
345 Prints some information about the file being viewed, including
346 its name and the line number and byte offset of the bottom line
347 being displayed. If possible, it also prints the length of the
348 file, the number of lines in the file and the percent of the
349 file above the last displayed line.
350
351 - Followed by one of the command line option letters (see OPTIONS
352 below), this will change the setting of that option and print a
353 message describing the new setting. If a ^P (CONTROL-P) is
354 entered immediately after the dash, the setting of the option is
355 changed but no message is printed. If the option letter has a
356 numeric value (such as -b or -h), or a string value (such as -P
357 or -t), a new value may be entered after the option letter. If
358 no new value is entered, a message describing the current set‐
359 ting is printed and nothing is changed.
360
361 -- Like the - command, but takes a long option name (see OPTIONS
362 below) rather than a single option letter. You must press ENTER
363 or RETURN after typing the option name. A ^P immediately after
364 the second dash suppresses printing of a message describing the
365 new setting, as in the - command.
366
367 -+ Followed by one of the command line option letters this will
368 reset the option to its default setting and print a message
369 describing the new setting. (The "-+X" command does the same
370 thing as "-+X" on the command line.) This does not work for
371 string-valued options.
372
373 --+ Like the -+ command, but takes a long option name rather than a
374 single option letter.
375
376 -! Followed by one of the command line option letters, this will
377 reset the option to the "opposite" of its default setting and
378 print a message describing the new setting. This does not work
379 for numeric or string-valued options.
380
381 --! Like the -! command, but takes a long option name rather than a
382 single option letter.
383
384 _ (Underscore.) Followed by one of the command line option let‐
385 ters, this will print a message describing the current setting
386 of that option. The setting of the option is not changed.
387
388 __ (Double underscore.) Like the _ (underscore) command, but takes
389 a long option name rather than a single option letter. You must
390 press ENTER or RETURN after typing the option name.
391
392 +cmd Causes the specified cmd to be executed each time a new file is
393 examined. For example, +G causes less to initially display each
394 file starting at the end rather than the beginning.
395
396 V Prints the version number of less being run.
397
398 q or Q or :q or :Q or ZZ
399 Exits less.
400
401 The following four commands may or may not be valid, depending on your
402 particular installation.
403
404 v Invokes an editor to edit the current file being viewed. The
405 editor is taken from the environment variable VISUAL if defined,
406 or EDITOR if VISUAL is not defined, or defaults to "vi" if nei‐
407 ther VISUAL nor EDITOR is defined. See also the discussion of
408 LESSEDIT under the section on PROMPTS below.
409
410 ! shell-command
411 Invokes a shell to run the shell-command given. A percent sign
412 (%) in the command is replaced by the name of the current file.
413 A pound sign (#) is replaced by the name of the previously exam‐
414 ined file. "!!" repeats the last shell command. "!" with no
415 shell command simply invokes a shell. On Unix systems, the
416 shell is taken from the environment variable SHELL, or defaults
417 to "sh". On MS-DOS and OS/2 systems, the shell is the normal
418 command processor.
419
420 | <m> shell-command
421 <m> represents any mark letter. Pipes a section of the input
422 file to the given shell command. The section of the file to be
423 piped is between the position marked by the letter and the cur‐
424 rent screen. The entire current screen is included, regardless
425 of whether the marked position is before or after the current
426 screen. <m> may also be ^ or $ to indicate beginning or end of
427 file respectively. If <m> is . or newline, the current screen
428 is piped.
429
430 s filename
431 Save the input to a file. This only works if the input is a
432 pipe, not an ordinary file.
433
435 Command line options are described below. Most options may be changed
436 while less is running, via the "-" command.
437
438 Most options may be given in one of two forms: either a dash followed
439 by a single letter, or two dashes followed by a long option name. A
440 long option name may be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is
441 unambiguous. For example, --quit-at-eof may be abbreviated --quit, but
442 not --qui, since both --quit-at-eof and --quiet begin with --qui. Some
443 long option names are in uppercase, such as --QUIT-AT-EOF, as distinct
444 from --quit-at-eof. Such option names need only have their first let‐
445 ter capitalized; the remainder of the name may be in either case. For
446 example, --Quit-at-eof is equivalent to --QUIT-AT-EOF.
447
448 Options are also taken from the environment variable "LESS". For exam‐
449 ple, to avoid typing "less -options ..." each time less is invoked, you
450 might tell csh:
451
452 setenv LESS "-options"
453
454 or if you use sh:
455
456 LESS="-options"; export LESS
457
458 On MS-DOS, you don't need the quotes, but you should replace any per‐
459 cent signs in the options string by double percent signs.
460
461 The environment variable is parsed before the command line, so command
462 line options override the LESS environment variable. If an option
463 appears in the LESS variable, it can be reset to its default value on
464 the command line by beginning the command line option with "-+".
465
466 Some options like -k or -D require a string to follow the option let‐
467 ter. The string for that option is considered to end when a dollar
468 sign ($) is found. For example, you can set two -D options on MS-DOS
469 like this:
470
471 LESS="Dn9.1$Ds4.1"
472
473 If the --use-backslash option appears earlier in the options, then a
474 dollar sign or backslash may be included literally in an option string
475 by preceding it with a backslash. If the --use-backslash option is not
476 in effect, then backslashes are not treated specially, and there is no
477 way to include a dollar sign in the option string.
478
479 -? or --help
480 This option displays a summary of the commands accepted by less
481 (the same as the h command). (Depending on how your shell
482 interprets the question mark, it may be necessary to quote the
483 question mark, thus: "-\?".)
484
485 -a or --search-skip-screen
486 By default, forward searches start at the top of the displayed
487 screen and backwards searches start at the bottom of the dis‐
488 played screen (except for repeated searches invoked by the n or
489 N commands, which start after or before the "target" line
490 respectively; see the -j option for more about the target line).
491 The -a option causes forward searches to instead start at the
492 bottom of the screen and backward searches to start at the top
493 of the screen, thus skipping all lines displayed on the screen.
494
495 -A or --SEARCH-SKIP-SCREEN
496 Causes all forward searches (not just non-repeated searches) to
497 start just after the target line, and all backward searches to
498 start just before the target line. Thus, forward searches will
499 skip part of the displayed screen (from the first line up to and
500 including the target line). Similarly backwards searches will
501 skip the displayed screen from the last line up to and including
502 the target line. This was the default behavior in less versions
503 prior to 441.
504
505 -bn or --buffers=n
506 Specifies the amount of buffer space less will use for each
507 file, in units of kilobytes (1024 bytes). By default 64 K of
508 buffer space is used for each file (unless the file is a pipe;
509 see the -B option). The -b option specifies instead that n
510 kilobytes of buffer space should be used for each file. If n is
511 -1, buffer space is unlimited; that is, the entire file can be
512 read into memory.
513
514 -B or --auto-buffers
515 By default, when data is read from a pipe, buffers are allocated
516 automatically as needed. If a large amount of data is read from
517 the pipe, this can cause a large amount of memory to be allo‐
518 cated. The -B option disables this automatic allocation of buf‐
519 fers for pipes, so that only 64 K (or the amount of space speci‐
520 fied by the -b option) is used for the pipe. Warning: use of -B
521 can result in erroneous display, since only the most recently
522 viewed part of the piped data is kept in memory; any earlier
523 data is lost.
524
525 -c or --clear-screen
526 Causes full screen repaints to be painted from the top line
527 down. By default, full screen repaints are done by scrolling
528 from the bottom of the screen.
529
530 -C or --CLEAR-SCREEN
531 Same as -c, for compatibility with older versions of less.
532
533 -d or --dumb
534 The -d option suppresses the error message normally displayed if
535 the terminal is dumb; that is, lacks some important capability,
536 such as the ability to clear the screen or scroll backward. The
537 -d option does not otherwise change the behavior of less on a
538 dumb terminal.
539
540 -Dxcolor or --color=xcolor
541 [MS-DOS only] Sets the color of the text displayed. x is a sin‐
542 gle character which selects the type of text whose color is
543 being set: n=normal, s=standout, d=bold, u=underlined, k=blink.
544 color is a pair of numbers separated by a period. The first
545 number selects the foreground color and the second selects the
546 background color of the text. A single number N is the same as
547 N.M, where M is the normal background color. The color may
548 start or end with u to use underline (with the normal color, if
549 by itself), if the system supports it (Windows only). x may
550 also be a to toggle strict ANSI sequence rendering (SGR mode).
551
552
553 -e or --quit-at-eof
554 Causes less to automatically exit the second time it reaches
555 end-of-file. By default, the only way to exit less is via the
556 "q" command.
557
558 -E or --QUIT-AT-EOF
559 Causes less to automatically exit the first time it reaches end-
560 of-file.
561
562 -f or --force
563 Forces non-regular files to be opened. (A non-regular file is a
564 directory or a device special file.) Also suppresses the warn‐
565 ing message when a binary file is opened. By default, less will
566 refuse to open non-regular files. Note that some operating sys‐
567 tems will not allow directories to be read, even if -f is set.
568
569 -F or --quit-if-one-screen
570 Causes less to automatically exit if the entire file can be dis‐
571 played on the first screen.
572
573 -g or --hilite-search
574 Normally, less will highlight ALL strings which match the last
575 search command. The -g option changes this behavior to high‐
576 light only the particular string which was found by the last
577 search command. This can cause less to run somewhat faster than
578 the default.
579
580 -G or --HILITE-SEARCH
581 The -G option suppresses all highlighting of strings found by
582 search commands.
583
584 --old-bot
585 Reverts to the old bottom of screen behavior. This can be some‐
586 times desirable if the long lines are not wrapped correctly
587 when reaching the bottom of the terminal, while scrolling
588 forward.
589
590 -hn or --max-back-scroll=n
591 Specifies a maximum number of lines to scroll backward. If it
592 is necessary to scroll backward more than n lines, the screen is
593 repainted in a forward direction instead. (If the terminal does
594 not have the ability to scroll backward, -h0 is implied.)
595
596 -i or --ignore-case
597 Causes searches to ignore case; that is, uppercase and lowercase
598 are considered identical. This option is ignored if any upper‐
599 case letters appear in the search pattern; in other words, if a
600 pattern contains uppercase letters, then that search does not
601 ignore case.
602
603 -I or --IGNORE-CASE
604 Like -i, but searches ignore case even if the pattern contains
605 uppercase letters.
606
607 -jn or --jump-target=n
608 Specifies a line on the screen where the "target" line is to be
609 positioned. The target line is the line specified by any com‐
610 mand to search for a pattern, jump to a line number, jump to a
611 file percentage or jump to a tag. The screen line may be speci‐
612 fied by a number: the top line on the screen is 1, the next is
613 2, and so on. The number may be negative to specify a line rel‐
614 ative to the bottom of the screen: the bottom line on the screen
615 is -1, the second to the bottom is -2, and so on. Alternately,
616 the screen line may be specified as a fraction of the height of
617 the screen, starting with a decimal point: .5 is in the middle
618 of the screen, .3 is three tenths down from the first line, and
619 so on. If the line is specified as a fraction, the actual line
620 number is recalculated if the terminal window is resized, so
621 that the target line remains at the specified fraction of the
622 screen height. If any form of the -j option is used, repeated
623 forward searches (invoked with "n" or "N") begin at the line
624 immediately after the target line, and repeated backward
625 searches begin at the target line, unless changed by -a or -A.
626 For example, if "-j4" is used, the target line is the fourth
627 line on the screen, so forward searches begin at the fifth line
628 on the screen. However nonrepeated searches (invoked with "/"
629 or "?") always begin at the start or end of the current screen
630 respectively.
631
632 -J or --status-column
633 Displays a status column at the left edge of the screen. The
634 status column shows the lines that matched the current search,
635 and any lines that are marked (via the m or M command). The
636 status column is also used if the -w or -W option is in effect.
637
638 -kfilename or --lesskey-file=filename
639 Causes less to open and interpret the named file as a lesskey
640 (1) file. Multiple -k options may be specified. If the LESSKEY
641 or LESSKEY_SYSTEM environment variable is set, or if a lesskey
642 file is found in a standard place (see KEY BINDINGS), it is also
643 used as a lesskey file.
644
645 -K or --quit-on-intr
646 Causes less to exit immediately (with status 2) when an inter‐
647 rupt character (usually ^C) is typed. Normally, an interrupt
648 character causes less to stop whatever it is doing and return to
649 its command prompt. Note that use of this option makes it
650 impossible to return to the command prompt from the "F" command.
651
652 -L or --no-lessopen
653 Ignore the LESSOPEN environment variable (see the INPUT PRE‐
654 PROCESSOR section below). This option can be set from within
655 less, but it will apply only to files opened subsequently, not
656 to the file which is currently open.
657
658 -m or --long-prompt
659 Causes less to prompt verbosely (like more), with the percent
660 into the file. By default, less prompts with a colon.
661
662 -M or --LONG-PROMPT
663 Causes less to prompt even more verbosely than more.
664
665 -n or --line-numbers
666 Suppresses line numbers. The default (to use line numbers) may
667 cause less to run more slowly in some cases, especially with a
668 very large input file. Suppressing line numbers with the -n
669 option will avoid this problem. Using line numbers means: the
670 line number will be displayed in the verbose prompt and in the =
671 command, and the v command will pass the current line number to
672 the editor (see also the discussion of LESSEDIT in PROMPTS
673 below).
674
675 -N or --LINE-NUMBERS
676 Causes a line number to be displayed at the beginning of each
677 line in the display.
678
679 -ofilename or --log-file=filename
680 Causes less to copy its input to the named file as it is being
681 viewed. This applies only when the input file is a pipe, not an
682 ordinary file. If the file already exists, less will ask for
683 confirmation before overwriting it.
684
685 -Ofilename or --LOG-FILE=filename
686 The -O option is like -o, but it will overwrite an existing file
687 without asking for confirmation.
688
689 If no log file has been specified, the -o and -O options can be
690 used from within less to specify a log file. Without a file
691 name, they will simply report the name of the log file. The "s"
692 command is equivalent to specifying -o from within less.
693
694 -ppattern or --pattern=pattern
695 The -p option on the command line is equivalent to specifying
696 +/pattern; that is, it tells less to start at the first occur‐
697 rence of pattern in the file.
698
699 -Pprompt or --prompt=prompt
700 Provides a way to tailor the three prompt styles to your own
701 preference. This option would normally be put in the LESS envi‐
702 ronment variable, rather than being typed in with each less com‐
703 mand. Such an option must either be the last option in the LESS
704 variable, or be terminated by a dollar sign.
705 -Ps followed by a string changes the default (short) prompt to
706 that string.
707 -Pm changes the medium (-m) prompt.
708 -PM changes the long (-M) prompt.
709 -Ph changes the prompt for the help screen.
710 -P= changes the message printed by the = command.
711 -Pw changes the message printed while waiting for data (in the
712 F command).
713
714 All prompt strings consist of a sequence of letters and special
715 escape sequences. See the section on PROMPTS for more details.
716
717 -q or --quiet or --silent
718 Causes moderately "quiet" operation: the terminal bell is not
719 rung if an attempt is made to scroll past the end of the file or
720 before the beginning of the file. If the terminal has a "visual
721 bell", it is used instead. The bell will be rung on certain
722 other errors, such as typing an invalid character. The default
723 is to ring the terminal bell in all such cases.
724
725 -Q or --QUIET or --SILENT
726 Causes totally "quiet" operation: the terminal bell is never
727 rung.
728
729 -r or --raw-control-chars
730 Causes "raw" control characters to be displayed. The default is
731 to display control characters using the caret notation; for
732 example, a control-A (octal 001) is displayed as "^A". Warning:
733 when the -r option is used, less cannot keep track of the actual
734 appearance of the screen (since this depends on how the screen
735 responds to each type of control character). Thus, various dis‐
736 play problems may result, such as long lines being split in the
737 wrong place.
738
739 -R or --RAW-CONTROL-CHARS
740 Like -r, but only ANSI "color" escape sequences are output in
741 "raw" form. Unlike -r, the screen appearance is maintained cor‐
742 rectly in most cases. ANSI "color" escape sequences are
743 sequences of the form:
744
745 ESC [ ... m
746
747 where the "..." is zero or more color specification characters
748 For the purpose of keeping track of screen appearance, ANSI
749 color escape sequences are assumed to not move the cursor. You
750 can make less think that characters other than "m" can end ANSI
751 color escape sequences by setting the environment variable
752 LESSANSIENDCHARS to the list of characters which can end a color
753 escape sequence. And you can make less think that characters
754 other than the standard ones may appear between the ESC and the
755 m by setting the environment variable LESSANSIMIDCHARS to the
756 list of characters which can appear.
757
758 -s or --squeeze-blank-lines
759 Causes consecutive blank lines to be squeezed into a single
760 blank line. This is useful when viewing nroff output.
761
762 -S or --chop-long-lines
763 Causes lines longer than the screen width to be chopped (trun‐
764 cated) rather than wrapped. That is, the portion of a long line
765 that does not fit in the screen width is not shown. The default
766 is to wrap long lines; that is, display the remainder on the
767 next line.
768
769 -ttag or --tag=tag
770 The -t option, followed immediately by a TAG, will edit the file
771 containing that tag. For this to work, tag information must be
772 available; for example, there may be a file in the current
773 directory called "tags", which was previously built by ctags (1)
774 or an equivalent command. If the environment variable LESSGLOB‐
775 ALTAGS is set, it is taken to be the name of a command compati‐
776 ble with global (1), and that command is executed to find the
777 tag. (See http://www.gnu.org/software/global/global.html). The
778 -t option may also be specified from within less (using the -
779 command) as a way of examining a new file. The command ":t" is
780 equivalent to specifying -t from within less.
781
782 -Ttagsfile or --tag-file=tagsfile
783 Specifies a tags file to be used instead of "tags".
784
785 -u or --underline-special
786 Causes backspaces and carriage returns to be treated as print‐
787 able characters; that is, they are sent to the terminal when
788 they appear in the input.
789
790 -U or --UNDERLINE-SPECIAL
791 Causes backspaces, tabs, carriage returns and "formatting char‐
792 acters" (as defined by Unicode) to be treated as control charac‐
793 ters; that is, they are handled as specified by the -r option.
794
795 By default, if neither -u nor -U is given, backspaces which
796 appear adjacent to an underscore character are treated spe‐
797 cially: the underlined text is displayed using the terminal's
798 hardware underlining capability. Also, backspaces which appear
799 between two identical characters are treated specially: the
800 overstruck text is printed using the terminal's hardware bold‐
801 face capability. Other backspaces are deleted, along with the
802 preceding character. Carriage returns immediately followed by a
803 newline are deleted. Other carriage returns are handled as
804 specified by the -r option. Text which is overstruck or under‐
805 lined can be searched for if neither -u nor -U is in effect.
806
807 -V or --version
808 Displays the version number of less.
809
810 -w or --hilite-unread
811 Temporarily highlights the first "new" line after a forward
812 movement of a full page. The first "new" line is the line imme‐
813 diately following the line previously at the bottom of the
814 screen. Also highlights the target line after a g or p command.
815 The highlight is removed at the next command which causes move‐
816 ment. The entire line is highlighted, unless the -J option is
817 in effect, in which case only the status column is highlighted.
818
819 -W or --HILITE-UNREAD
820 Like -w, but temporarily highlights the first new line after any
821 forward movement command larger than one line.
822
823 -xn,... or --tabs=n,...
824 Sets tab stops. If only one n is specified, tab stops are set
825 at multiples of n. If multiple values separated by commas are
826 specified, tab stops are set at those positions, and then con‐
827 tinue with the same spacing as the last two. For example,
828 -x9,17 will set tabs at positions 9, 17, 25, 33, etc. The
829 default for n is 8.
830
831 -X or --no-init
832 Disables sending the termcap initialization and deinitialization
833 strings to the terminal. This is sometimes desirable if the
834 deinitialization string does something unnecessary, like clear‐
835 ing the screen.
836
837 -yn or --max-forw-scroll=n
838 Specifies a maximum number of lines to scroll forward. If it is
839 necessary to scroll forward more than n lines, the screen is
840 repainted instead. The -c or -C option may be used to repaint
841 from the top of the screen if desired. By default, any forward
842 movement causes scrolling.
843
844 -zn or --window=n or -n
845 Changes the default scrolling window size to n lines. The
846 default is one screenful. The z and w commands can also be used
847 to change the window size. The "z" may be omitted for compati‐
848 bility with some versions of more. If the number n is negative,
849 it indicates n lines less than the current screen size. For
850 example, if the screen is 24 lines, -z-4 sets the scrolling win‐
851 dow to 20 lines. If the screen is resized to 40 lines, the
852 scrolling window automatically changes to 36 lines.
853
854 -"cc or --quotes=cc
855 Changes the filename quoting character. This may be necessary
856 if you are trying to name a file which contains both spaces and
857 quote characters. Followed by a single character, this changes
858 the quote character to that character. Filenames containing a
859 space should then be surrounded by that character rather than by
860 double quotes. Followed by two characters, changes the open
861 quote to the first character, and the close quote to the second
862 character. Filenames containing a space should then be preceded
863 by the open quote character and followed by the close quote
864 character. Note that even after the quote characters are
865 changed, this option remains -" (a dash followed by a double
866 quote).
867
868 -~ or --tilde
869 Normally lines after end of file are displayed as a single tilde
870 (~). This option causes lines after end of file to be displayed
871 as blank lines.
872
873 -# or --shift
874 Specifies the default number of positions to scroll horizontally
875 in the RIGHTARROW and LEFTARROW commands. If the number speci‐
876 fied is zero, it sets the default number of positions to one
877 half of the screen width. Alternately, the number may be speci‐
878 fied as a fraction of the width of the screen, starting with a
879 decimal point: .5 is half of the screen width, .3 is three
880 tenths of the screen width, and so on. If the number is speci‐
881 fied as a fraction, the actual number of scroll positions is
882 recalculated if the terminal window is resized, so that the
883 actual scroll remains at the specified fraction of the screen
884 width.
885
886 --follow-name
887 Normally, if the input file is renamed while an F command is
888 executing, less will continue to display the contents of the
889 original file despite its name change. If --follow-name is
890 specified, during an F command less will periodically attempt to
891 reopen the file by name. If the reopen succeeds and the file is
892 a different file from the original (which means that a new file
893 has been created with the same name as the original (now
894 renamed) file), less will display the contents of that new file.
895
896 --no-keypad
897 Disables sending the keypad initialization and deinitialization
898 strings to the terminal. This is sometimes useful if the keypad
899 strings make the numeric keypad behave in an undesirable manner.
900
901 --use-backslash
902 This option changes the interpretations of options which follow
903 this one. After the --use-backslash option, any backslash in an
904 option string is removed and the following character is taken
905 literally. This allows a dollar sign to be included in option
906 strings.
907
908 --rscroll
909 This option changes the character used to mark truncated lines.
910 It may begin with a two-character attribute indicator like LESS‐
911 BINFMT does. If there is no attribute indicator, standout is
912 used. If set to "-", truncated lines are not marked.
913
914 -- A command line argument of "--" marks the end of option argu‐
915 ments. Any arguments following this are interpreted as file‐
916 names. This can be useful when viewing a file whose name begins
917 with a "-" or "+".
918
919 + If a command line option begins with +, the remainder of that
920 option is taken to be an initial command to less. For example,
921 +G tells less to start at the end of the file rather than the
922 beginning, and +/xyz tells it to start at the first occurrence
923 of "xyz" in the file. As a special case, +<number> acts like
924 +<number>g; that is, it starts the display at the specified line
925 number (however, see the caveat under the "g" command above).
926 If the option starts with ++, the initial command applies to
927 every file being viewed, not just the first one. The + command
928 described previously may also be used to set (or change) an ini‐
929 tial command for every file.
930
931
933 When entering command line at the bottom of the screen (for example, a
934 filename for the :e command, or the pattern for a search command), cer‐
935 tain keys can be used to manipulate the command line. Most commands
936 have an alternate form in [ brackets ] which can be used if a key does
937 not exist on a particular keyboard. (Note that the forms beginning
938 with ESC do not work in some MS-DOS and Windows systems because ESC is
939 the line erase character.) Any of these special keys may be entered
940 literally by preceding it with the "literal" character, either ^V or
941 ^A. A backslash itself may also be entered literally by entering two
942 backslashes.
943
944 LEFTARROW [ ESC-h ]
945 Move the cursor one space to the left.
946
947 RIGHTARROW [ ESC-l ]
948 Move the cursor one space to the right.
949
950 ^LEFTARROW [ ESC-b or ESC-LEFTARROW ]
951 (That is, CONTROL and LEFTARROW simultaneously.) Move the cur‐
952 sor one word to the left.
953
954 ^RIGHTARROW [ ESC-w or ESC-RIGHTARROW ]
955 (That is, CONTROL and RIGHTARROW simultaneously.) Move the cur‐
956 sor one word to the right.
957
958 HOME [ ESC-0 ]
959 Move the cursor to the beginning of the line.
960
961 END [ ESC-$ ]
962 Move the cursor to the end of the line.
963
964 BACKSPACE
965 Delete the character to the left of the cursor, or cancel the
966 command if the command line is empty.
967
968 DELETE or [ ESC-x ]
969 Delete the character under the cursor.
970
971 ^BACKSPACE [ ESC-BACKSPACE ]
972 (That is, CONTROL and BACKSPACE simultaneously.) Delete the
973 word to the left of the cursor.
974
975 ^DELETE [ ESC-X or ESC-DELETE ]
976 (That is, CONTROL and DELETE simultaneously.) Delete the word
977 under the cursor.
978
979 UPARROW [ ESC-k ]
980 Retrieve the previous command line. If you first enter some
981 text and then press UPARROW, it will retrieve the previous com‐
982 mand which begins with that text.
983
984 DOWNARROW [ ESC-j ]
985 Retrieve the next command line. If you first enter some text
986 and then press DOWNARROW, it will retrieve the next command
987 which begins with that text.
988
989 TAB Complete the partial filename to the left of the cursor. If it
990 matches more than one filename, the first match is entered into
991 the command line. Repeated TABs will cycle thru the other
992 matching filenames. If the completed filename is a directory, a
993 "/" is appended to the filename. (On MS-DOS systems, a "\" is
994 appended.) The environment variable LESSSEPARATOR can be used
995 to specify a different character to append to a directory name.
996
997 BACKTAB [ ESC-TAB ]
998 Like, TAB, but cycles in the reverse direction thru the matching
999 filenames.
1000
1001 ^L Complete the partial filename to the left of the cursor. If it
1002 matches more than one filename, all matches are entered into the
1003 command line (if they fit).
1004
1005 ^U (Unix and OS/2) or ESC (MS-DOS)
1006 Delete the entire command line, or cancel the command if the
1007 command line is empty. If you have changed your line-kill char‐
1008 acter in Unix to something other than ^U, that character is used
1009 instead of ^U.
1010
1011 ^G Delete the entire command line and return to the main prompt.
1012
1013
1015 You may define your own less commands by using the program lesskey (1)
1016 to create a lesskey file. This file specifies a set of command keys
1017 and an action associated with each key. You may also use lesskey to
1018 change the line-editing keys (see LINE EDITING), and to set environment
1019 variables. If the environment variable LESSKEY is set, less uses that
1020 as the name of the lesskey file. Otherwise, less looks in a standard
1021 place for the lesskey file: On Unix systems, less looks for a lesskey
1022 file called "$HOME/.less". On MS-DOS and Windows systems, less looks
1023 for a lesskey file called "$HOME/_less", and if it is not found there,
1024 then looks for a lesskey file called "_less" in any directory specified
1025 in the PATH environment variable. On OS/2 systems, less looks for a
1026 lesskey file called "$HOME/less.ini", and if it is not found, then
1027 looks for a lesskey file called "less.ini" in any directory specified
1028 in the INIT environment variable, and if it not found there, then looks
1029 for a lesskey file called "less.ini" in any directory specified in the
1030 PATH environment variable. See the lesskey manual page for more
1031 details.
1032
1033 A system-wide lesskey file may also be set up to provide key bindings.
1034 If a key is defined in both a local lesskey file and in the system-wide
1035 file, key bindings in the local file take precedence over those in the
1036 system-wide file. If the environment variable LESSKEY_SYSTEM is set,
1037 less uses that as the name of the system-wide lesskey file. Otherwise,
1038 less looks in a standard place for the system-wide lesskey file: On
1039 Unix systems, the system-wide lesskey file is /usr/local/etc/sysless.
1040 (However, if less was built with a different sysconf directory than
1041 /usr/local/etc, that directory is where the sysless file is found.) On
1042 MS-DOS and Windows systems, the system-wide lesskey file is c:\_sys‐
1043 less. On OS/2 systems, the system-wide lesskey file is c:\sysless.ini.
1044
1045
1047 You may define an "input preprocessor" for less. Before less opens a
1048 file, it first gives your input preprocessor a chance to modify the way
1049 the contents of the file are displayed. An input preprocessor is sim‐
1050 ply an executable program (or shell script), which writes the contents
1051 of the file to a different file, called the replacement file. The con‐
1052 tents of the replacement file are then displayed in place of the con‐
1053 tents of the original file. However, it will appear to the user as if
1054 the original file is opened; that is, less will display the original
1055 filename as the name of the current file.
1056
1057 An input preprocessor receives one command line argument, the original
1058 filename, as entered by the user. It should create the replacement
1059 file, and when finished, print the name of the replacement file to its
1060 standard output. If the input preprocessor does not output a replace‐
1061 ment filename, less uses the original file, as normal. The input pre‐
1062 processor is not called when viewing standard input. To set up an
1063 input preprocessor, set the LESSOPEN environment variable to a command
1064 line which will invoke your input preprocessor. This command line
1065 should include one occurrence of the string "%s", which will be
1066 replaced by the filename when the input preprocessor command is
1067 invoked.
1068
1069 When less closes a file opened in such a way, it will call another pro‐
1070 gram, called the input postprocessor, which may perform any desired
1071 clean-up action (such as deleting the replacement file created by
1072 LESSOPEN). This program receives two command line arguments, the orig‐
1073 inal filename as entered by the user, and the name of the replacement
1074 file. To set up an input postprocessor, set the LESSCLOSE environment
1075 variable to a command line which will invoke your input postprocessor.
1076 It may include two occurrences of the string "%s"; the first is
1077 replaced with the original name of the file and the second with the
1078 name of the replacement file, which was output by LESSOPEN.
1079
1080 For example, on many Unix systems, these two scripts will allow you to
1081 keep files in compressed format, but still let less view them directly:
1082
1083 lessopen.sh:
1084 #! /bin/sh
1085 case "$1" in
1086 *.Z) uncompress -c $1 >/tmp/less.$$ 2>/dev/null
1087 if [ -s /tmp/less.$$ ]; then
1088 echo /tmp/less.$$
1089 else
1090 rm -f /tmp/less.$$
1091 fi
1092 ;;
1093 esac
1094
1095 lessclose.sh:
1096 #! /bin/sh
1097 rm $2
1098
1099 To use these scripts, put them both where they can be executed and set
1100 LESSOPEN="lessopen.sh %s", and LESSCLOSE="lessclose.sh %s %s". More
1101 complex LESSOPEN and LESSCLOSE scripts may be written to accept other
1102 types of compressed files, and so on.
1103
1104 It is also possible to set up an input preprocessor to pipe the file
1105 data directly to less, rather than putting the data into a replacement
1106 file. This avoids the need to decompress the entire file before start‐
1107 ing to view it. An input preprocessor that works this way is called an
1108 input pipe. An input pipe, instead of writing the name of a replace‐
1109 ment file on its standard output, writes the entire contents of the
1110 replacement file on its standard output. If the input pipe does not
1111 write any characters on its standard output, then there is no replace‐
1112 ment file and less uses the original file, as normal. To use an input
1113 pipe, make the first character in the LESSOPEN environment variable a
1114 vertical bar (|) to signify that the input preprocessor is an input
1115 pipe. As with non-pipe input preprocessors, the command string must
1116 contain one occurrence of %s, which is replaced with the filename of
1117 the input file.
1118
1119 For example, on many Unix systems, this script will work like the pre‐
1120 vious example scripts:
1121
1122 lesspipe.sh:
1123 #! /bin/sh
1124 case "$1" in
1125 *.Z) uncompress -c $1 2>/dev/null
1126 *) exit 1
1127 ;;
1128 esac
1129 exit $?
1130
1131 To use this script, put it where it can be executed and set
1132 LESSOPEN="|lesspipe.sh %s".
1133
1134 Note that a preprocessor cannot output an empty file, since that is
1135 interpreted as meaning there is no replacement, and the original file
1136 is used. To avoid this, if LESSOPEN starts with two vertical bars, the
1137 exit status of the script becomes meaningful. If the exit status is
1138 zero, the output is considered to be replacement text, even if it is
1139 empty. If the exit status is nonzero, any output is ignored and the
1140 original file is used. For compatibility with previous versions of
1141 less, if LESSOPEN starts with only one vertical bar, the exit status of
1142 the preprocessor is ignored.
1143
1144 When an input pipe is used, a LESSCLOSE postprocessor can be used, but
1145 it is usually not necessary since there is no replacement file to clean
1146 up. In this case, the replacement file name passed to the LESSCLOSE
1147 postprocessor is "-".
1148
1149 For compatibility with previous versions of less, the input preproces‐
1150 sor or pipe is not used if less is viewing standard input. However, if
1151 the first character of LESSOPEN is a dash (-), the input preprocessor
1152 is used on standard input as well as other files. In this case, the
1153 dash is not considered to be part of the preprocessor command. If
1154 standard input is being viewed, the input preprocessor is passed a file
1155 name consisting of a single dash. Similarly, if the first two charac‐
1156 ters of LESSOPEN are vertical bar and dash (|-) or two vertical bars
1157 and a dash (||-), the input pipe is used on standard input as well as
1158 other files. Again, in this case the dash is not considered to be part
1159 of the input pipe command.
1160
1161 There are used following files to set up default preprocessor:
1162 /etc/profile.d/less.sh
1163 /etc/profile.d/less.csh
1164 These files set up /usr/bin/lesspipe.sh as a default filter. An user
1165 defined filter can be specified in ~/.lessfilter. This file should have
1166 an execute bit set and accept only one parameter, which represents a
1167 filename. If the user defined filter process the file, zero should be
1168 returned. Otherwise ~/.lessfilter tries to handle the file.
1169
1170
1172 There are three types of characters in the input file:
1173
1174 normal characters
1175 can be displayed directly to the screen.
1176
1177 control characters
1178 should not be displayed directly, but are expected to be found
1179 in ordinary text files (such as backspace and tab).
1180
1181 binary characters
1182 should not be displayed directly and are not expected to be
1183 found in text files.
1184
1185 A "character set" is simply a description of which characters are to be
1186 considered normal, control, and binary. The LESSCHARSET environment
1187 variable may be used to select a character set. Possible values for
1188 LESSCHARSET are:
1189
1190 ascii BS, TAB, NL, CR, and formfeed are control characters, all chars
1191 with values between 32 and 126 are normal, and all others are
1192 binary.
1193
1194 iso8859
1195 Selects an ISO 8859 character set. This is the same as ASCII,
1196 except characters between 160 and 255 are treated as normal
1197 characters.
1198
1199 latin1 Same as iso8859.
1200
1201 latin9 Same as iso8859.
1202
1203 dos Selects a character set appropriate for MS-DOS.
1204
1205 ebcdic Selects an EBCDIC character set.
1206
1207 IBM-1047
1208 Selects an EBCDIC character set used by OS/390 Unix Services.
1209 This is the EBCDIC analogue of latin1. You get similar results
1210 by setting either LESSCHARSET=IBM-1047 or LC_CTYPE=en_US in your
1211 environment.
1212
1213 koi8-r Selects a Russian character set.
1214
1215 next Selects a character set appropriate for NeXT computers.
1216
1217 utf-8 Selects the UTF-8 encoding of the ISO 10646 character set.
1218 UTF-8 is special in that it supports multi-byte characters in
1219 the input file. It is the only character set that supports
1220 multi-byte characters.
1221
1222 windows
1223 Selects a character set appropriate for Microsoft Windows (cp
1224 1251).
1225
1226 In rare cases, it may be desired to tailor less to use a character set
1227 other than the ones definable by LESSCHARSET. In this case, the envi‐
1228 ronment variable LESSCHARDEF can be used to define a character set. It
1229 should be set to a string where each character in the string represents
1230 one character in the character set. The character "." is used for a
1231 normal character, "c" for control, and "b" for binary. A decimal num‐
1232 ber may be used for repetition. For example, "bccc4b." would mean
1233 character 0 is binary, 1, 2 and 3 are control, 4, 5, 6 and 7 are
1234 binary, and 8 is normal. All characters after the last are taken to be
1235 the same as the last, so characters 9 through 255 would be normal.
1236 (This is an example, and does not necessarily represent any real char‐
1237 acter set.)
1238
1239 This table shows the value of LESSCHARDEF which is equivalent to each
1240 of the possible values for LESSCHARSET:
1241
1242 ascii 8bcccbcc18b95.b
1243 dos 8bcccbcc12bc5b95.b.
1244 ebcdic 5bc6bcc7bcc41b.9b7.9b5.b..8b6.10b6.b9.7b
1245 9.8b8.17b3.3b9.7b9.8b8.6b10.b.b.b.
1246 IBM-1047 4cbcbc3b9cbccbccbb4c6bcc5b3cbbc4bc4bccbc
1247 191.b
1248 iso8859 8bcccbcc18b95.33b.
1249 koi8-r 8bcccbcc18b95.b128.
1250 latin1 8bcccbcc18b95.33b.
1251 next 8bcccbcc18b95.bb125.bb
1252
1253 If neither LESSCHARSET nor LESSCHARDEF is set, but any of the strings
1254 "UTF-8", "UTF8", "utf-8" or "utf8" is found in the LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE or
1255 LANG environment variables, then the default character set is utf-8.
1256
1257 If that string is not found, but your system supports the setlocale
1258 interface, less will use setlocale to determine the character set.
1259 setlocale is controlled by setting the LANG or LC_CTYPE environment
1260 variables.
1261
1262 Finally, if the setlocale interface is also not available, the default
1263 character set is latin1.
1264
1265 Control and binary characters are displayed in standout (reverse
1266 video). Each such character is displayed in caret notation if possible
1267 (e.g. ^A for control-A). Caret notation is used only if inverting the
1268 0100 bit results in a normal printable character. Otherwise, the char‐
1269 acter is displayed as a hex number in angle brackets. This format can
1270 be changed by setting the LESSBINFMT environment variable. LESSBINFMT
1271 may begin with a "*" and one character to select the display attribute:
1272 "*k" is blinking, "*d" is bold, "*u" is underlined, "*s" is standout,
1273 and "*n" is normal. If LESSBINFMT does not begin with a "*", normal
1274 attribute is assumed. The remainder of LESSBINFMT is a string which
1275 may include one printf-style escape sequence (a % followed by x, X, o,
1276 d, etc.). For example, if LESSBINFMT is "*u[%x]", binary characters
1277 are displayed in underlined hexadecimal surrounded by brackets. The
1278 default if no LESSBINFMT is specified is "*s<%02X>". Warning: the
1279 result of expanding the character via LESSBINFMT must be less than 31
1280 characters.
1281
1282 When the character set is utf-8, the LESSUTFBINFMT environment variable
1283 acts similarly to LESSBINFMT but it applies to Unicode code points that
1284 were successfully decoded but are unsuitable for display (e.g., unas‐
1285 signed code points). Its default value is "<U+%04lX>". Note that
1286 LESSUTFBINFMT and LESSBINFMT share their display attribute setting
1287 ("*x") so specifying one will affect both; LESSUTFBINFMT is read after
1288 LESSBINFMT so its setting, if any, will have priority. Problematic
1289 octets in a UTF-8 file (octets of a truncated sequence, octets of a
1290 complete but non-shortest form sequence, illegal octets, and stray
1291 trailing octets) are displayed individually using LESSBINFMT so as to
1292 facilitate diagnostic of how the UTF-8 file is ill-formed.
1293
1294
1296 The -P option allows you to tailor the prompt to your preference. The
1297 string given to the -P option replaces the specified prompt string.
1298 Certain characters in the string are interpreted specially. The prompt
1299 mechanism is rather complicated to provide flexibility, but the ordi‐
1300 nary user need not understand the details of constructing personalized
1301 prompt strings.
1302
1303 A percent sign followed by a single character is expanded according to
1304 what the following character is:
1305
1306 %bX Replaced by the byte offset into the current input file. The b
1307 is followed by a single character (shown as X above) which spec‐
1308 ifies the line whose byte offset is to be used. If the charac‐
1309 ter is a "t", the byte offset of the top line in the display is
1310 used, an "m" means use the middle line, a "b" means use the bot‐
1311 tom line, a "B" means use the line just after the bottom line,
1312 and a "j" means use the "target" line, as specified by the -j
1313 option.
1314
1315 %B Replaced by the size of the current input file.
1316
1317 %c Replaced by the column number of the text appearing in the first
1318 column of the screen.
1319
1320 %dX Replaced by the page number of a line in the input file. The
1321 line to be used is determined by the X, as with the %b option.
1322
1323 %D Replaced by the number of pages in the input file, or equiva‐
1324 lently, the page number of the last line in the input file.
1325
1326 %E Replaced by the name of the editor (from the VISUAL environment
1327 variable, or the EDITOR environment variable if VISUAL is not
1328 defined). See the discussion of the LESSEDIT feature below.
1329
1330 %f Replaced by the name of the current input file.
1331
1332 %F Replaced by the last component of the name of the current input
1333 file.
1334
1335 %i Replaced by the index of the current file in the list of input
1336 files.
1337
1338 %lX Replaced by the line number of a line in the input file. The
1339 line to be used is determined by the X, as with the %b option.
1340
1341 %L Replaced by the line number of the last line in the input file.
1342
1343 %m Replaced by the total number of input files.
1344
1345 %pX Replaced by the percent into the current input file, based on
1346 byte offsets. The line used is determined by the X as with the
1347 %b option.
1348
1349 %PX Replaced by the percent into the current input file, based on
1350 line numbers. The line used is determined by the X as with the
1351 %b option.
1352
1353 %s Same as %B.
1354
1355 %t Causes any trailing spaces to be removed. Usually used at the
1356 end of the string, but may appear anywhere.
1357
1358 %T Normally expands to the word "file". However if viewing files
1359 via a tags list using the -t option, it expands to the word
1360 "tag".
1361
1362 %x Replaced by the name of the next input file in the list.
1363
1364 If any item is unknown (for example, the file size if input is a pipe),
1365 a question mark is printed instead.
1366
1367 The format of the prompt string can be changed depending on certain
1368 conditions. A question mark followed by a single character acts like
1369 an "IF": depending on the following character, a condition is evalu‐
1370 ated. If the condition is true, any characters following the question
1371 mark and condition character, up to a period, are included in the
1372 prompt. If the condition is false, such characters are not included.
1373 A colon appearing between the question mark and the period can be used
1374 to establish an "ELSE": any characters between the colon and the period
1375 are included in the string if and only if the IF condition is false.
1376 Condition characters (which follow a question mark) may be:
1377
1378 ?a True if any characters have been included in the prompt so far.
1379
1380 ?bX True if the byte offset of the specified line is known.
1381
1382 ?B True if the size of current input file is known.
1383
1384 ?c True if the text is horizontally shifted (%c is not zero).
1385
1386 ?dX True if the page number of the specified line is known.
1387
1388 ?e True if at end-of-file.
1389
1390 ?f True if there is an input filename (that is, if input is not a
1391 pipe).
1392
1393 ?lX True if the line number of the specified line is known.
1394
1395 ?L True if the line number of the last line in the file is known.
1396
1397 ?m True if there is more than one input file.
1398
1399 ?n True if this is the first prompt in a new input file.
1400
1401 ?pX True if the percent into the current input file, based on byte
1402 offsets, of the specified line is known.
1403
1404 ?PX True if the percent into the current input file, based on line
1405 numbers, of the specified line is known.
1406
1407 ?s Same as "?B".
1408
1409 ?x True if there is a next input file (that is, if the current
1410 input file is not the last one).
1411
1412 Any characters other than the special ones (question mark, colon,
1413 period, percent, and backslash) become literally part of the prompt.
1414 Any of the special characters may be included in the prompt literally
1415 by preceding it with a backslash.
1416
1417 Some examples:
1418
1419 ?f%f:Standard input.
1420
1421 This prompt prints the filename, if known; otherwise the string "Stan‐
1422 dard input".
1423
1424 ?f%f .?ltLine %lt:?pt%pt\%:?btByte %bt:-...
1425
1426 This prompt would print the filename, if known. The filename is fol‐
1427 lowed by the line number, if known, otherwise the percent if known,
1428 otherwise the byte offset if known. Otherwise, a dash is printed.
1429 Notice how each question mark has a matching period, and how the %
1430 after the %pt is included literally by escaping it with a backslash.
1431
1432 ?n?f%f .?m(%T %i of %m) ..?e(END) ?x- Next\: %x..%t";
1433
1434 This prints the filename if this is the first prompt in a file, fol‐
1435 lowed by the "file N of N" message if there is more than one input
1436 file. Then, if we are at end-of-file, the string "(END)" is printed
1437 followed by the name of the next file, if there is one. Finally, any
1438 trailing spaces are truncated. This is the default prompt. For refer‐
1439 ence, here are the defaults for the other two prompts (-m and -M
1440 respectively). Each is broken into two lines here for readability
1441 only.
1442
1443 ?n?f%f .?m(%T %i of %m) ..?e(END) ?x- Next\: %x.:
1444 ?pB%pB\%:byte %bB?s/%s...%t
1445
1446 ?f%f .?n?m(%T %i of %m) ..?ltlines %lt-%lb?L/%L. :
1447 byte %bB?s/%s. .?e(END) ?x- Next\: %x.:?pB%pB\%..%t
1448
1449 And here is the default message produced by the = command:
1450
1451 ?f%f .?m(%T %i of %m) .?ltlines %lt-%lb?L/%L. .
1452 byte %bB?s/%s. ?e(END) :?pB%pB\%..%t
1453
1454 The prompt expansion features are also used for another purpose: if an
1455 environment variable LESSEDIT is defined, it is used as the command to
1456 be executed when the v command is invoked. The LESSEDIT string is
1457 expanded in the same way as the prompt strings. The default value for
1458 LESSEDIT is:
1459
1460 %E ?lm+%lm. %f
1461
1462 Note that this expands to the editor name, followed by a + and the line
1463 number, followed by the file name. If your editor does not accept the
1464 "+linenumber" syntax, or has other differences in invocation syntax,
1465 the LESSEDIT variable can be changed to modify this default.
1466
1467
1469 When the environment variable LESSSECURE is set to 1, less runs in a
1470 "secure" mode. This means these features are disabled:
1471
1472 ! the shell command
1473
1474 | the pipe command
1475
1476 :e the examine command.
1477
1478 v the editing command
1479
1480 s -o log files
1481
1482 -k use of lesskey files
1483
1484 -t use of tags files
1485
1486 metacharacters in filenames, such as *
1487
1488 filename completion (TAB, ^L)
1489
1490 Less can also be compiled to be permanently in "secure" mode.
1491
1492
1494 If the environment variable LESS_IS_MORE is set to 1, or if the program
1495 is invoked via a file link named "more", less behaves (mostly) in con‐
1496 formance with the POSIX "more" command specification. In this mode,
1497 less behaves differently in these ways:
1498
1499 The -e option works differently. If the -e option is not set, less
1500 behaves as if the -e option were set. If the -e option is set, less
1501 behaves as if the -E option were set.
1502
1503 The -m option works differently. If the -m option is not set, the
1504 medium prompt is used, and it is prefixed with the string "--More--".
1505 If the -m option is set, the short prompt is used.
1506
1507 The -n option acts like the -z option. The normal behavior of the -n
1508 option is unavailable in this mode.
1509
1510 The parameter to the -p option is taken to be a less command rather
1511 than a search pattern.
1512
1513 The LESS environment variable is ignored, and the MORE environment
1514 variable is used in its place.
1515
1516
1518 Environment variables may be specified either in the system environment
1519 as usual, or in a lesskey (1) file. If environment variables are
1520 defined in more than one place, variables defined in a local lesskey
1521 file take precedence over variables defined in the system environment,
1522 which take precedence over variables defined in the system-wide lesskey
1523 file.
1524
1525 COLUMNS
1526 Sets the number of columns on the screen. Takes precedence over
1527 the number of columns specified by the TERM variable. (But if
1528 you have a windowing system which supports TIOCGWINSZ or
1529 WIOCGETD, the window system's idea of the screen size takes
1530 precedence over the LINES and COLUMNS environment variables.)
1531
1532 EDITOR The name of the editor (used for the v command).
1533
1534 HOME Name of the user's home directory (used to find a lesskey file
1535 on Unix and OS/2 systems).
1536
1537 HOMEDRIVE, HOMEPATH
1538 Concatenation of the HOMEDRIVE and HOMEPATH environment vari‐
1539 ables is the name of the user's home directory if the HOME vari‐
1540 able is not set (only in the Windows version).
1541
1542 INIT Name of the user's init directory (used to find a lesskey file
1543 on OS/2 systems).
1544
1545 LANG Language for determining the character set.
1546
1547 LC_CTYPE
1548 Language for determining the character set.
1549
1550 LESS Options which are passed to less automatically.
1551
1552 LESSANSIENDCHARS
1553 Characters which may end an ANSI color escape sequence (default
1554 "m").
1555
1556 LESSANSIMIDCHARS
1557 Characters which may appear between the ESC character and the
1558 end character in an ANSI color escape sequence (default
1559 "0123456789:;[?!"'#%()*+ ".
1560
1561 LESSBINFMT
1562 Format for displaying non-printable, non-control characters.
1563
1564 LESSCHARDEF
1565 Defines a character set.
1566
1567 LESSCHARSET
1568 Selects a predefined character set.
1569
1570 LESSCLOSE
1571 Command line to invoke the (optional) input-postprocessor.
1572
1573 LESSECHO
1574 Name of the lessecho program (default "lessecho"). The lessecho
1575 program is needed to expand metacharacters, such as * and ?, in
1576 filenames on Unix systems.
1577
1578 LESSEDIT
1579 Editor prototype string (used for the v command). See discus‐
1580 sion under PROMPTS.
1581
1582 LESSGLOBALTAGS
1583 Name of the command used by the -t option to find global tags.
1584 Normally should be set to "global" if your system has the global
1585 (1) command. If not set, global tags are not used.
1586
1587 LESSHISTFILE
1588 Name of the history file used to remember search commands and
1589 shell commands between invocations of less. If set to "-" or
1590 "/dev/null", a history file is not used. The default is
1591 "$HOME/.lesshst" on Unix systems, "$HOME/_lesshst" on DOS and
1592 Windows systems, or "$HOME/lesshst.ini" or "$INIT/lesshst.ini"
1593 on OS/2 systems.
1594
1595 LESSHISTSIZE
1596 The maximum number of commands to save in the history file. The
1597 default is 100.
1598
1599 LESSKEY
1600 Name of the default lesskey(1) file.
1601
1602 LESSKEY_SYSTEM
1603 Name of the default system-wide lesskey(1) file.
1604
1605 LESSMETACHARS
1606 List of characters which are considered "metacharacters" by the
1607 shell.
1608
1609 LESSMETAESCAPE
1610 Prefix which less will add before each metacharacter in a com‐
1611 mand sent to the shell. If LESSMETAESCAPE is an empty string,
1612 commands containing metacharacters will not be passed to the
1613 shell.
1614
1615 LESSOPEN
1616 Command line to invoke the (optional) input-preprocessor.
1617
1618 LESSSECURE
1619 Runs less in "secure" mode. See discussion under SECURITY.
1620
1621 LESSSEPARATOR
1622 String to be appended to a directory name in filename comple‐
1623 tion.
1624
1625 LESSUTFBINFMT
1626 Format for displaying non-printable Unicode code points.
1627
1628 LESS_IS_MORE
1629 Emulate the more (1) command.
1630
1631 LINES Sets the number of lines on the screen. Takes precedence over
1632 the number of lines specified by the TERM variable. (But if you
1633 have a windowing system which supports TIOCGWINSZ or WIOCGETD,
1634 the window system's idea of the screen size takes precedence
1635 over the LINES and COLUMNS environment variables.)
1636
1637 MORE Options which are passed to less automatically when running in
1638 more compatible mode.
1639
1640 PATH User's search path (used to find a lesskey file on MS-DOS and
1641 OS/2 systems).
1642
1643 SHELL The shell used to execute the ! command, as well as to expand
1644 filenames.
1645
1646 TERM The type of terminal on which less is being run.
1647
1648 VISUAL The name of the editor (used for the v command).
1649
1650
1652 lesskey(1)
1653
1654
1656 Copyright (C) 1984-2017 Mark Nudelman
1657
1658 less is part of the GNU project and is free software. You can redis‐
1659 tribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either (1) the GNU Gen‐
1660 eral Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or
1661 (2) the Less License. See the file README in the less distribution for
1662 more details regarding redistribution. You should have received a copy
1663 of the GNU General Public License along with the source for less; see
1664 the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59
1665 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. You should also
1666 have received a copy of the Less License; see the file LICENSE.
1667
1668 less is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
1669 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FIT‐
1670 NESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
1671 more details.
1672
1673
1675 Mark Nudelman
1676 Send bug reports or comments to <bug-less@gnu.org>
1677 See http://www.greenwoodsoftware.com/less/bugs.html for the latest list
1678 of known bugs in less.
1679 For more information, see the less homepage at
1680 http://www.greenwoodsoftware.com/less.
1681
1682
1683
1684 Version 530: 05 Dec 2017 LESS(1)