|
|
1.1 ! root 1: .TI GENERAL ! 2: Introduction to Help ! 3: .sp 2 ! 4: The Unix "help" command displays documentation on various topics. ! 5: If you type ! 6: ! 7: help ! 8: ! 9: from the Unix shell, you will see a list of the major topics that ! 10: help knows about and a set of instructions for perusing them. ! 11: If one of the topics were "topic", you could skip directly to ! 12: information relating to "topic" by typing ! 13: ! 14: help topic ! 15: ! 16: from the shell, and after seeing the documentation you would be ! 17: returned directly to the shell. ! 18: ! 19: The help topics are intended to provide Unix documentation ! 20: written for inexperienced users, as well as coverage of various ! 21: non-standard features of the local Unix system. ! 22: ! 23: Another command that displays on-line information is "man", ! 24: which shows you the section from the Unix Programmer's Manual ! 25: for a particular command or system feature. ! 26: The documentation it produces is terse and difficult, and, ! 27: if used correctly, comprehensive. ! 28: To see the manual page for the "ls" command, for example, type ! 29: ! 30: man ls ! 31: ! 32: Help has several indexes in which to look for subjects you request. ! 33: They help you locate references to help, man, and off-line documentation. ! 34: To find out briefly what each topic is about, type "index_help" ! 35: (no quotation marks) as a topic.
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.