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I would like to know how to view special characters while using 'less' command. For instance I want to see the non-printable characters with a special notation. For instance in 'vi' editor I use "set list on" to see the line termination characters represented by dollar '$' character. Similarly I would want to do this using 'less' command.

I referred Unix less manual, but to no avail.

6 Answers 6

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less will look in its environment to see if there is a variable named LESS

You can set LESS in one of your ~/.profile (.bash_rc, etc, etc) and then anytime you run less from the comand line, it will find the LESS.

Try adding this

export LESS="-CQaix4"

This is the setup I use, there are some behaviors embedded in that may confuse you, so you can find out about what all of these mean from the help function in less, just tap the 'h' key and nose around, or run less --help.

Edit:

I looked at the help, and noticed there is also an -r option

-r  -R  ....  --raw-control-chars  --RAW-CONTROL-CHARS
                Output "raw" control characters.

I agree that cat may be the most exact match to your stated needs.

cat -vet file | less

Will add '$' at end of each line and convert tab char to visual '^I'.

cat --help
   (edited)
    -e                       equivalent to -vE
    -E, --show-ends          display $ at end of each line
    -t                       equivalent to -vT
    -T, --show-tabs          display TAB characters as ^I
    -v, --show-nonprinting   use ^ and M- notation, except for LFD and TAB

I hope this helps.

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    'cat' information helpful. Unexplained LESS options a lot less helpful. This would be a better answer if you removed them, since I don't think they're relevant to the question.
    – ijw
    Sep 2, 2011 at 12:27
  • 1
    Where can I read more about ^ and M- notation? I know that when I type CTRL+C in the CLI that I get ^C, but I have no clue what ^M is. Feb 27, 2020 at 8:04
  • Hmm, I had expected man ascii to natively carry that information, but had to look at man-ascii.com and click the button in the bottom row for Name vs Character to get the ^M versions to appear in the table. I think the origins of that version are in ancient unix documentation, or even predate Unix, as a many of the control chars to to control teletype machines. (never saw one myself ;-) ) . Good luck.
    – shellter
    Feb 27, 2020 at 14:16
  • @MelvinRoest : forgot to flag my answer above to you. AND see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_character for the history of Control Chars. Good luck.
    – shellter
    Feb 27, 2020 at 15:35
61

You can do that with cat and that pipe the output to less:

cat -e yourFile | less

This excerpt from man cat explains what -e means:

   -e     equivalent to -vE

   -E, --show-ends
          display $ at end of each line

   -v, --show-nonprinting
          use ^ and M- notation, except for LFD and TAB
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    ... or cat -eT yourfile | less if you want to see tab characters. Mar 5, 2014 at 5:47
  • 3
    I had problems with the capital T, if someone has the same problem just use cat -et yourfile | less and it should work Mar 6, 2016 at 15:01
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For less use -u to display carriage returns (^M) and backspaces (^H), or -U to show the previous and tabs (^I) for example:

$ awk 'BEGIN{print "foo\bbar\tbaz\r\n"}' | less -U 
foo^Hbar^Ibaz^M

(END)

Without the -U switch the output would be:

fobar   baz

(END)

See man less for more exact description of the features.

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In the same spirit as https://stackoverflow.com/a/6943976/7154924:

cat -A

-A, --show-all
       equivalent to -vET
-v, --show-nonprinting
       use ^ and M- notation, except for LFD and TAB
-E, --show-ends
       display $ at end of each line
-T, --show-tabs
       display TAB characters as ^I

Alternatively, or at the same time, you can pipe to tr to substitute arbitrary characters to the desired ones for display, before piping to a pager like less if desired.

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    I like piping to tr with these arguments to just output a dot for unprintable, because sometimes I need things to align in fixed-width fields: tr -c '[:print:]\r\n' '.' Mar 7, 2019 at 13:33
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All special, nonprintable characters are displayed using ^ notation in less. However, line feed is actually printable (just make a new line), so not considered special, so you'll have problems replacing it. If you just want to see line endings, the easiest way might be

sed -e 's/$/$/' | less
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Now, sometimes you already have less open, and you can't use cat on it. For example, you did a | less, and you can't just reopen a file, as that's actually a stream.

If all you need is to identify end of line, one easy way is to search for the last character on the line: /.$. The search will highlight the last character, even if it is a blank, making it easy to identify it.

That will only help with the end of line case. If you need other special characters, you can use the cat -vet solution above with marks and pipe:

  • mark the top of the text you're interested in: ma
  • go to the bottom of the text you're interested in and mark it, as well: mb
  • go back to the mark a: 'a
  • pipe from a to b through cat -vet and view the result in another less command: |bcat -vet | less

This will open another less process, which shows the result of running cat -vet on the text that lies between marks a and b.

If you want the whole thing, instead, do g|$cat -vet | less, to go to the first line and filter all lines through cat.

The advantage of this method over less options is that it does not mess with the output you see on the screen.

One would think that eight years after this question was originally posted, less would have that feature... But I can't even see a feature request for it on https://github.com/gwsw/less/issues

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