Jump to content

wc (Unix)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:580:c000:f94:be5f:f4ff:fe22:1b49 (talk) at 18:32, 18 June 2020 (Remove erroneous license. If any license were to be used, it should be related to actual Unix (shared-source) rather than any of the reimplementations.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

wc
Developer(s)AT&T Bell Laboratories
Initial releaseNovember 3, 1971; 53 years ago (1971-11-03)
Operating systemUnix and Unix-like, MSX-DOS
TypeCommand

wc (short for word count) is a command in Unix and Unix-like operating systems.

The program reads either standard input or a list of files and generates one or more of the following statistics: newline count, word count, and byte count. If a list of files is provided, both individual file and total statistics follow.

Example

Sample execution of wc:

 $ wc foo bar
      40     149     947 foo
    2294   16638   97724 bar
    2334   16787   98671 total

The first column is the count of newlines, meaning that the text file foo has 40 newlines while bar has 2294 newlines- resulting in a total of 2334 newlines. The second column indicates the number of words in each text file showing that there are 149 words in foo and 16638 words in bar – giving a total of 16787 words. The last column indicates the number of characters in each text file, meaning that the file foo has 947 characters while bar has 97724 characters – 98671 characters all in all.

Newer versions of wc can differentiate between byte and character count. This difference arises with Unicode which includes multi-byte characters. The desired behaviour is selected with the -c or -m switch.

History

wc is part of the X/Open Portability Guide since issue 2 of 1987. It was inherited into the first version of POSIX.1 and the Single Unix Specification.[1] It appeared in Version 1 Unix.[2]

GNU wc used to be part of the GNU textutils package; it is now part of GNU coreutils. The version of wc bundled in GNU coreutils was written by Paul Rubin and David MacKenzie.[3] A wc command is also part of ASCII's MSX-DOS2 Tools for MSX-DOS version 2.[4]

Usage

  • wc -l <filename> prints the line count (note that if the last line does not have \n, it will not be counted)
  • wc -c <filename> prints the byte count
  • wc -m <filename> prints the character count
  • wc -L <filename> prints the length of the longest line (GNU extension)
  • wc -w <filename> prints the word count

See also

References