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NL(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual NL(1)
NAME
nl - line numbering filter
SYNOPSIS
nl [-p] [-b type] [-d delim] [-f type] [-h type] [-i incr] [-l num]
[-n format] [-s sep] [-v startnum] [-w width] [file]
DESCRIPTION
The nl utility reads lines from the named file, applies a configurable
line numbering filter operation, and writes the result to the standard
output. If file is a single dash (`-') or absent, nl reads from the
standard input.
The nl utility treats the text it reads in terms of logical pages.
Unless specified otherwise, line numbering is reset at the start of each
logical page. A logical page consists of a header, a body and a footer
section; empty sections are valid. Different line numbering options are
independently available for header, body and footer sections.
The starts of logical page sections are signalled by input lines
containing nothing but one of the following sequences of delimiter
characters:
Line Start of
\:\:\: header
\:\: body
\: footer
If the input does not contain any logical page section signalling
directives, the text being read is assumed to consist of a single logical
page body.
The following options are available:
-b type Specify the logical page body lines to be numbered.
Recognized type arguments are:
a Number all lines.
t Number only non-empty lines.
n No line numbering.
pexpr Number only those lines that contain the basic
regular expression specified by expr.
The default type for logical page body lines is t.
-d delim Specify the delimiter characters used to indicate the
start of a logical page section in the input file. At
most two characters may be specified; if only one
character is specified, the first character is replaced
and the second character remains unchanged. The default
delim characters are "\:".
-f type Specify the same as -b type except for logical page footer
lines. The default type for logical page footer lines is
lines. The default incr value is 1.
-l num If numbering of all lines is specified for the current
logical section using the corresponding -b a, -f a or -h a
option, specify the number of adjacent blank lines to be
considered as one. For example, -l 2 results in only the
second adjacent blank line being numbered. The default
num value is 1.
-n format Specify the line numbering output format. Recognized
format arguments are:
ln Left justified.
rn Right justified, leading zeros suppressed.
rz Right justified, leading zeros kept.
The default format is rn.
-p Specify that line numbering should not be restarted at
logical page delimiters.
-s sep Specify the characters used in separating the line number
and the corresponding text line. The default sep setting
is a single tab character.
-v startnum Specify the initial value used to number logical page
lines; see also the description of the -p option. The
default startnum value is 1.
-w width Specify the number of characters to be occupied by the
line number; in case the width is insufficient to hold the
line number, it will be truncated to its width least
significant digits. The default width is 6.
ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE and LC_COLLATE environment variables affect
the execution of nl as described in environ(7).
EXIT STATUS
The nl utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
Number all non-blank lines:
$ echo -e "This is\n\n\na simple text" | nl
1 This is
2 a simple text
Number all lines including blank ones, with right justified line numbers
with leading zeroes, starting at 2, with increment of 2 and a custom
multi-character separator:
$ echo -e "This\nis\nan\n\n\nexample" | nl -ba -n rz -i2 -s "->" -v2
000002->This
000004->is
000006->an
000008->
000010->
1 a simple text
with multiple
2 lines
SEE ALSO
jot(1), pr(1)
STANDARDS
The nl utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 ("POSIX.1").
HISTORY
The nl utility first appeared in AT&T System III UNIX.
BUGS
Input lines are limited to LINE_MAX (2048) bytes in length.
FreeBSD 14.2-RELEASE July 24, 2022 FreeBSD 14.2-RELEASE