man

man stands for "manual" and is a command which presents the "man pages" for a particular command.

What are "man pages"? Man pages are text documents that describe the utility or command, what it does, how to use it, and what options are available to use. It is one of the best resources to learn about a given command. The man command should be your first stop to learn about a new command.

To see the "man pages" for the cat command, you can run the following.

man cat

You will then be presented with text describing the cat command and its various options. To scroll down in the presented interface, press the "j" button on your keyboard, or use the down arrow key, or the space bar. To scroll up, press the "k" button or the up arrow key. To quit the man pages, press the "q" button (for quit).

whatis

Closely related to the man command is the whatis command, which gives a one-line summary of a command. For instnace, here is the operation of whatis cat and whatis nano and whatis vi and whatis head

[email protected]:[~] $ man -f cat
cat (1p)             - concatenate and print files
cat (1)              - concatenate files and print on the standard output
[email protected]:[~] $ whatis cat
cat (1p)             - concatenate and print files
cat (1)              - concatenate files and print on the standard output
[email protected]:[~] $ whatis nano
nano (1)             - Nano's ANOther editor, an enhanced free Pico clone
[email protected]:[~] $ whatis vi
vi (1p)              - screen-oriented (visual) display editor
vi (1)               - Vi IMproved, a programmer's text editor
[email protected]:[~] $ whatis head
head (1p)            - copy the first part of files
HEAD (1)             - Simple command line user agent
head (1)             - output the first part of files

whereis

The whereis command shows where a program is available. For instance, here is the operation of whereis for emacs, vi, nano, man, and cd.

[email protected]:[data] $ whereis emacs
emacs: /usr/share/emacs
[email protected]:[data] $ whereis vi
vi: /usr/bin/vi /usr/share/man/man1p/vi.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/vi.1.gz
[email protected]:[data] $ whereis nano
nano: /usr/bin/nano /usr/share/nano /usr/share/man/man1/nano.1.gz /usr/share/info/nano.info.gz
[email protected]:[data] $ whereis man
man: /usr/bin/man /usr/share/man /usr/share/man/man7/man.7.gz /usr/share/man/man1p/man.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/man.1.gz
[email protected]:[data] $ whereis cd
cd: /usr/bin/cd /usr/share/man/man1p/cd.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/cd.1.gz

type and which

Another way to check where a command is located is to use type or which; see page 36 in Section 2.6 of Unix Power Tools

For instance, we could check:

type cat and type nano and type vi and type head

and in bash we can type:

type -all cat and type -all nano and type -all vi and type -all head

and

which cat and which nano and which vi and which head