1WTF(6)                         BSD Games Manual                         WTF(6)
2

NAME

4     wtf — look up terms
5

SYNOPSIS

7     wtf [-f dbfile] [-o] [is] term ...
8

DESCRIPTION

10     The wtf utility looks up the meaning of one or more term operands speci‐
11     fied on the command line.
12
13     term will first be searched for as an acronym in the acronym databases,
14     which are expected to be in the format “acronym[tab]meaning”.  If no
15     match has been found, wtf will check to see if the term is known by
16     whatis(1), pkg_info(1), or, when called from within a pkgsrc package
17     directory, pkgsrc's internal help facility, “make help topic=XXX”.
18
19     The optional is operand will be ignored, allowing the fairly natural “wtf
20     is WTF” usage.
21
22     The following option is available:
23
24     -f dbfile
25           Overrides the default list of acronym databases, bypassing the
26           value of the ACRONYMDB variable.  Unlike this variable the -f
27           option only accepts one file name as an argument, but it may be
28           given multiple times to specify more than one file to use.
29
30     -o    Include acronyms that could be considered offensive to some.
31           Please consult fortune(6) for more information about the -o flag.
32

ENVIRONMENT

34     ACRONYMDB  The default list of acronym databases may be overridden by
35                setting the environment variable ACRONYMDB to the name of one
36                or more space-separated file names of acronym databases.
37

FILES

39     /usr/share/misc/acronyms       default acronym database.
40     /usr/share/misc/acronyms-o     default offensive acronym database.
41     /usr/share/misc/acronyms.comp  default computer-related acronym database.
42

SEE ALSO

44     make(1), pkg_info(1), whatis(1), fortune(6)
45

HISTORY

47     wtf first appeared in NetBSD 1.5.  Initially it only translated acronyms;
48     functionality to look up the meaning of terms in other sources was added
49     later.
50
51BSD                             April 22, 2015                             BSD
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