|
|
1.1 root 1: .TH SEQ 1
2: .CT 1 numbers
3: .SH NAME
4: seq \- print sequences of numbers
5: .SH SYNOPSIS
6: .B seq
7: [
8: .B -w
9: ]
10: [
11: .BI -f format
12: ]
13: [
14: .I first
15: [
16: .I incr
17: ]
18: ]
19: .I last
20: .SH DESCRIPTION
21: .I Seq
22: prints a sequence of numbers, one per line, from
23: .I first
24: (default 1) to as near
25: .I last
26: as possible, in increments of
27: .I incr
28: (default 1).
29: The numbers are interpreted as floating point.
30: .PP
31: Normally integer values are printed as decimal integers.
32: The options are
33: .TP
34: .BI -f format
35: Use the
36: .IR printf (3)-style
37: .I format
38: for printing each (floating point) number.
39: The default is
40: .LR %g .
41: .TP
42: .B -w
43: Equalize the widths of all numbers by padding with
44: leading zeros as necessary.
45: Not effective with option
46: .BR -f .
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.