$arr_19 ), array( 3, false, $arr_20, $arr_24 ), array( 2, false, "\" />", $arr_25 ) ) ); ?> $arr_27 ), array( 3, false, $arr_28, $arr_30 ), array( 2, false, "\" />\n\n", $arr_31 ) ) ); ?> array( 2, false, false, $arr_9 ), array( 4, $arr_10, "if", $arr_245, $arr_248 ), array( 2, false, "\n", $arr_249 ) ) ); ?> rr_466 ), array( 4, $arr_467, "if", $arr_482, $arr_484 ), array( 2, false, "\n", $arr_485 ) ) ); ?> TACKLING TEXT » Linux Magazine
 

Text processing and filtering

TACKLING TEXT

Author(s):

Enjoy a crash course on some of the text-processing and -filtering capabilities found in Linux.

Unix-like operating systems have historically been very much about text processing. Really, the Unix design religion is: Make simple tools whose output can be manipulated by others with the use of pipes and other forms of output redirection. In this article, I’ll look at the wealth of Linux command-line tools for combining, selecting, extracting, and otherwise manipulating text.

Read full article as PDF »

022-025_textstreams.pdf (1.86 MB)
comments powered by Disqus

Direct Download

Read full article as PDF »

022-025_textstreams.pdf (1.86 MB)

News