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Tutorial5: Redirection

28 bytes added, 13:46, 3 February 2021
INVESTIGATION 3: ISSUING MULTIPLE UNIX/LINUX COMMANDS
# Issue the following Linux commands: <span style="color:blue;font-weight:bold;font-family:courier;">cal;pwd;date > output.txt</span><br><br>What happened? Where is the output for the '''date''' command?<br>Why isn't the output for the '''cal''' and '''pwd''' commands are NOT contained in that file?<br><br>
# Issue a Linux command to view the contents of the file called '''output.txt'''<br><br>What do you notice?<br><br>Let's use '''grouping''' to make modification to the previous command<br><br>
# Issue the following Linux commands: <span style="color:blue;font-weight:bold;font-family:courier;">(cal;pwd;date) > output.txt</span><br><br>What did you notice?<br><br>
# Issue a Linux command to view the contents of the file called '''output.txt'''<br><br>What do you notice? What did grouping the three Linux commands do?<br><br>
# Issue the following Linux pipeline command (using \ at the end of most lines):<br><span style="color:blue;font-family:courier;font-weight:bold">echo "This will be split over multiple \<br>lines. Note that the shell will realize \<br>that a pipe requires another command, so \<br>it will automatically go to the next line" |tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'</span><br><br>Did the command work? What does this command do?<br><br>
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