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cat file with no line wrap

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-09 13:38 出处:网络
In *nix, how do I display (cat) a file with no line-wrapping: longer lines should be cut such that they fit into screen\'s开发者_如何转开发 width.You may be looking for fmt:

In *nix, how do I display (cat) a file with no line-wrapping: longer lines should be cut such that they fit into screen's开发者_如何转开发 width.


You may be looking for fmt:

fmt file

This pretty aggressively reformats your text, so it may do more than what you want.

Alternatively, the cut command can cut text to a specific column width, discarding text beyond the right margin:

cat file | cut -c1-80

Another handy option is the less -S command, which displays a file in a full screen window with left/right scrolling for long lines:

less -S file


Note that cut accepts a filename as an argument.

This seems to work for me:

watch 'bash -c "cut -c -$COLUMNS file"'

For testing, I added a right margin:

watch 'bash -c "cut -c -$(($COLUMNS-10)) file"'

When I resized my terminal, the truncation was updated to match.


as stated by others, the answer is cut -c ..., but to add some dynamic to it, I prefer this:

cat file.txt |cut -c -$(tput cols)


to toggle long-line-wrap in less. Default is to wrap.

- `less file`
- in file type `"-S"` to toggle to truncate on line width
- to toggle back `"-S"` again.


The use of cut does not take into account that tabs are considered a single character \t but they are printed as 8 blank spaces. Thus a file with tabs will be cut at different perceived columns.

less -S truncates optimally the text, also in the presence of tabs, but AFAIK it cannot be used to non-interactively print the "chopped" file.

A working solution is to convert tabs into spaces through expand and then cut the output: expand < file | cut -c -$(tput cols)


Other solution, this time using paginate command pr

echo "your long line" | pr -m -t -w 80

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