Terminal pager explained

A terminal pager, paging program or simply pager is a computer program used to view (but not modify) the contents of a text file moving down the file one line or one screen at a time. Some, but not all, pagers allow movement up a file.[1] A popular cross-platform terminal pager is more, which can move forwards and backwards in text files but cannot move backwards in pipes.[2] less is a more advanced pager that allows movement forward and backward, and contains extra functions such as search.[3]

Some programs incorporate their own paging function, for example bash's tab completion function.[4]

Examples

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Debian: An overview of file paging applications.
  2. http://linux.die.net/man/1/more manpage of more
  3. http://linux.die.net/man/1/less manpage of less
  4. Web site: Bash Reference Manual: Programmable Completion Builtins. gnu.org.
  5. Web site: most(1): browse/page through text file - Linux man page. die.net.
  6. Web site: View-Mode.