Erle Robotics Unix Introduction Gitbook Free

Redirecting the Output

We use the > symbol to redirect the output of a command. For ex####3.1 Redirection

Most processes initiated by UNIX commands write to the standard output (that is, they write to the terminal screen), and many take their input from the standard input (that is, they read it from the keyboard). There is also the standard error, where processes write their error messages, by default, to the terminal screen.

We have already seen one use of the cat command to write the contents of a file to the screen.

Now type catwithout specifing a file to read

 cat

Then type a few words on the keyboard and press the [Return] key.

Finally hold the [Ctrl] key down and press [d] (written as ^D for short) to end the input.

What has happened?

If you run the cat command without specifing a file to read, it reads the standard input (the keyboard), and on receiving the 'end of file' (^D), copies it to the standard output (the screen).

In UNIX, we can redirect both the input and the output of commands. ample, to create a file called list1 containing a list of fruit, type

cat > list1

Then type in the names of some fruit. Press [Return] after each one.

pear
banana
apple
^D {this means press [Ctrl] and [d] to stop}

What happens is the cat command reads the standard input (the keyboard) and the > redirects the output, which normally goes to the screen, into a file called list1

To read the contents of the file, type

 cat list1

As exercise, using the above method, try to create another file called list2 containing the following fruit: orange, plum, mango, grapefruit. Read the contents of list2

Appending to a file

The form >> appends standard output to a file. So to add more items to the file list1, type

 cat >> list1

Then type in the names of more fruit

peach
grape
orange
^D (Control D to stop)

To read the contents of the file, type

 cat list1

You should now have two files. One contains six fruit, the other contains four fruit.

We will now use the cat command to join (concatenate) list1 and list2 into a new file called biglist. Type

 cat list1 list2 > biglist

What this is doing is reading the contents of list1 and list2 in turn, then outputing the text to the file biglist

To read the contents of the new file, type

 cat biglist

Notice that > writes over the content of the file, while >> writes at the end of the content of the file.