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wc
Print byte, word, and line counts, count the number of bytes,
whitespace-separated words, and newlines in each given FILE, or standard input
if none are given or for a FILE of `-'.
SYNTAX wc [OPTION]... [FILE]... OPTIONS `-c' `--bytes' `--chars' Print only the byte counts. `-w' `--words' Print only the word counts. `-l' `--lines' Print only the newline counts. `-L' `--max-line-length' Print only the length of the longest line per file, and if there is more than one file it prints the maximum (not the sum) of those lengths.
`wc' prints one line of counts for each file, and if the file
was given as an argument, it prints the file name following the counts.
If more than one FILE is given, `wc' prints a final line containing the cumulative
counts, with the file name `total'. The counts are printed in this order: newlines,
words, bytes.
By default, each count is output right-justified in a 7-byte field with one
space between fields so that the numbers and file names line up nicely in columns.
However, POSIX requires that there be exactly one space separating columns.
You can make `wc' use the POSIX-mandated output format by setting the `POSIXLY_CORRECT'
environment variable.
By default, `wc' prints all three counts. Options can specify that only certain
counts be printed. Options do not undo others previously given, so
wc --bytes --words
will print both the byte counts and the word counts.
Related commands:
cat - Display the contents of a file
cksum - Print CRC checksum and byte counts
cmp - Compare two files
du - Estimate file space usage
factor - Print prime factors
Equivalent Windows NT commands:
none