|
|
1.1 root 1: #print
2: You can also use the "=" command to find out what
3: the 'current' line is. Since the
4: current line is referred to as '.', do you see that
5: .=
6: is the appropriate command to print the current line
7: number? So if you go through a sequence like
8: 3p
9: .=
10: the second command will print '3'. That's not very
11: exciting, so why don't you edit file 'roger',
12: print the next to last line, and then use '.='
13: to find out what it is. Don't forget to exit
14: from the editor with w, and then q. Then
15: finish by typing "answer N" where
16: N is what you found, as usual.
17: #create roger
18: this is a short
19: file containing five lines
20: of which
21: this line is next to last
22: indeed
23: #copyin
24: #user
25: #uncopyin
26: #match 4
27: #log
28: #next
29: 15.1a 10
30: 15.2a 5
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.