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Command: fold | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: fold.1
FOLD(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual FOLD(1)
NAME
fold - fold long lines for finite width output device
SYNOPSIS
fold [-bs] [-w width] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
fold is a filter which folds the contents of the specified files, or the
standard input if no files are specified, breaking the lines to have a
maximum of 80 display columns.
The options are as follows:
-b Count width in bytes rather than column positions.
-s If an output line would be broken after a non-blank character
but contains at least one blank character, break the line
earlier, after the last blank character. This is useful to
avoid line breaks in the middle of words, if possible.
-w width Specifies a line width to use instead of the default of 80.
Unless -b is specified, a backspace character decrements the column
position by one, a carriage return resets the column position to zero,
and a tab advances the column position to the next multiple of eight.
ENVIRONMENT
LC_CTYPE The character encoding locale(1). It decides which byte
sequences form characters and what their display width is. If
unset or set to "C", "POSIX", or an unsupported value, each
byte except backspace, tab, newline, and carriage return is
treated as a character of display width 1.
EXIT STATUS
The fold utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
expand(1), fmt(1)
STANDARDS
The fold utility is compliant with the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX.1")
specification.
HISTORY
The fold utility first appeared in 1BSD. It was rewritten for
4.3BSD-Reno to improve speed and modernize style. The -b and -s options
were added to NetBSD 1.0 for IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2") compliance.
AUTHORS
Bill Joy wrote the original version of fold on June 28, 1977. Kevin
Ruddy rewrote the command in 1990, and J. T. Conklin added the missing
options in 1993.
BUGS
Traditional roff(7) output semantics, implemented both by GNU nroff and
by mandoc(1), only uses a single backspace for backing up the previous
character, even for double-width characters. The fold backspace
semantics required by POSIX mishandles such backspace-encoded sequences,
breaking lines early. The fmt(1) utility provides similar functionality
and does not suffer from that problem, but isn't standardized by POSIX.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 October 24, 2016 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8