Linux Basics: cat - Concatenate and Display Files

Similar to tail in some way, we have cat. Except cat can also add content to a file, and this makes it super powerful.

In its simplest usage, cat prints a file’s content to the standard output:

cat file

You can print the content of multiple files:

cat file1 file2

and using the output redirection operator > you can concatenate the content of multiple files into a new file:

cat file1 file2 > file3

Using >> you can append the content of multiple files into a new file, creating it if it does not exist:

cat file1 file2 >> file3

When watching source code files it’s great to see the line numbers, and you can have cat print them using the -n option:

cat -n file1

You can only add a number to non-blank lines using -b, or you can also remove all the multiple empty lines using -s.

cat is often used in combination with the pipe operator | to feed a file content as input to another command: cat file1 | anothercommand.

This command works on Linux, macOS, WSL, and anywhere you have a UNIX environment

Lessons in this unit:

0: Introduction
1: pwd - Print Working Directory
2: cd - Change Directory
3: ls - List Files
4: ▶︎ cat - Concatenate and Display Files
5: less - View File Contents
6: tail - View End of Files
7: echo - Print to Output
8: which - Locate Commands
9: type - Display Command Type
10: clear - Clear Terminal

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