Commande utilisée pour afficher le contenu stocké dans un fichier dans Linux
The less command is one I use a lot. It shows you the content stored
inside a file, in a nice and interactive UI.
Usage:
$ less <filename>
Once you are inside a less session, you can quit by pressing q
You can navigate the file contents using the up and down keys, or using space bar
and b to navigate page by page. You can also jump to the end of the file pressing G
and jump back to the start pressing g
You can search contents inside the file by pressing / and typing a word to
search. This searches forward. You can search backwards using the
symbol and typing a word ?
This command just visualises the file's content. You can directly open an
editor by pressing v
It will use the system editor, which in most cases is
vim .
Pressing the F key enters follow mode, or watch mode. When the file is
changed by someone else, like from another program, you get to see the
changes live. By default this is not happening, and you only see the file
version at the time you opened it. You need to press ctrl-C to quit this mode.
You can open multiple files, and navigate through them using :n (to go to the next file)
and :p (to go to the previous).
OHIOLee