https://www.ostechnix.com/fold-command-tutorial-examples-beginners
Have you ever found yourself in a situation where you want
to fold or break the output of a command to fit within a specific width?
I have find myself in this situation few times while running VMs,
especially the servers with no GUI. Just in case, if you ever wanted to
limit the output of a command to a particular width, look nowhere! Here
is where fold command comes in handy! The fold command
wraps each line in an input file to fit a specified width and prints it
to the standard output.
In this brief tutorial, we are going to see the usage of fold command with practical examples.
The typical syntax of fold command:
To wrap each line in the above file to default width, run:
As you can see in the above output, fold command has limited the output to a width of 80 characters.
Of course, we can specify your preferred width, for example 50, like below:
Instead of just displaying output, we can also write the output to a new file as shown below:
Let us check the contents of the new file:
Did you closely notice the output of the previous commands? Some
words are broken between lines. To overcome this issue, we can use -s
flag to break the lines at spaces.
The following command wraps each line in a given file to width “50” and breaks the line at spaces:
See? Now, the output is much clear. This command puts each space separated word in a new line and words with length > 50 are wrapped.
In all above examples, we limited the output width by columns. However, we can enforce the width of the output to the number of bytes specified using -b option. The following command breaks the output at 20 bytes.
Also read:
For more details, refer the man pages.
Cheers!
The Fold Command Tutorial With Examples
Fold command is the part of GNU coreutils package, so let us not bother about installation.The typical syntax of fold command:
fold [OPTION]... [FILE]...Allow me to show you some examples, so you can get a better idea about fold command. I have a file named linux.txt with some random lines.
To wrap each line in the above file to default width, run:
fold linux.txt80 columns per line is the default width. Here is the output of above command:
As you can see in the above output, fold command has limited the output to a width of 80 characters.
Of course, we can specify your preferred width, for example 50, like below:
fold -w50 linux.txtSample output would be:
Instead of just displaying output, we can also write the output to a new file as shown below:
fold -w50 linux.txt > linux1.txtThe above command will wrap the lines of linux.txt to a width of 50 characters, and writes the output to new file named linux1.txt.
Let us check the contents of the new file:
cat linux1.txt
The following command wraps each line in a given file to width “50” and breaks the line at spaces:
fold -w50 -s linux.txtSample output:
See? Now, the output is much clear. This command puts each space separated word in a new line and words with length > 50 are wrapped.
In all above examples, we limited the output width by columns. However, we can enforce the width of the output to the number of bytes specified using -b option. The following command breaks the output at 20 bytes.
fold -b20 linux.txtSample output:
Also read:
For more details, refer the man pages.
man foldAnd, that’s for now folks. You know now how to use fold command to limit the output of a command to fit in a specific width. I hope this was useful. We will be posting more useful guides everyday. Stay tuned!
Cheers!
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