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If you put filenames on the command line, a typical UNIX command will
read those files.
With no filenames, the command will read its standard input.
How can you make the command read both files and standard input?
Some UNIX systems, and utilities such as
gawk (33.12),
support a special name like
/dev/stdin (13.1).
Some older UNIX commands, like
cat (25.2)
and
diff (28.1),
will accept a "filename" of - (dash).
There's not actually a file named -; it's just a shorthand
for "read standard input."
NOTE: This syntax might change in the future.
For instance, here's how to compare two files on different computers.
The rsh snooze cat bin/aprog command
sends a copy of the file bin/aprog from the remote host snooze
down the pipe here on the local computer.
diff compares the local file aprog.new to the standard input
from the pipe:
rsh |
% |
|---|
For more examples, see articles 9.11 and 13.7.
- JP
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| 13.12 Writing to Multiple Terminals for Demonstrations | Book Index | 13.14 What Can You Do with an Empty File? |