WC(1)                           User Commands                          WC(1)
NAME
       wc - display a count of lines, words and characters in a file
SYNOPSIS
   /usr/bin/wc       wc [
-c | 
-m | 
-C] [
-lw] [
file]...   
ksh93       wc [
-c | 
-m | 
-C] [
-lLqw] [
file]...
DESCRIPTION
   /usr/bin/wc       wc reads one or more input files and, by default, writes the number
       of NEWLINE characters, words and bytes contained in each input file
       to the standard output.       
wc also writes a total count for all named files, if more than one
       input file is specified.       
wc considers a 
word to be a non-zero-length string of characters
       delimited by white space (for example, 
SPACE, 
TAB). See 
iswspace(3C)       or 
isspace(3C).   
ksh93       The 
wc built-in in 
ksh93 is associated with the 
/bin and 
/usr/bin       paths. It is invoked when 
wc is executed without a pathname prefix
       and the pathname search finds a 
/bin/wc or 
/usr/bin/wc executable.       
wc reads one or more input files and, by default, for each file
       writes a line containing the number of NEWLINEs, words, and bytes
       contained in each file followed by the file name to standard output
       in that order. A word is defined to be a 
non-zero length string
       delimited by 
isspace(3C) characters.
       If more than one file is specified, 
wc writes a total count for all
       of the named files with total written instead of the file name.
       By default, 
wc writes all three counts. Options can specified so that
       only certain counts are written. The 
-c, 
-C, and 
-m options are
       mutually exclusive.
       If no file is specified, or if the file is 
-, 
wc reads from standard
       input and no filename is written to standard output. The start of the
       file is defined as the current offset.       
-c       --bytes | chars           List the byte counts.       
-l       --lines           List the line counts.       
-L       --longest-line | max-line-length           List the longest line length.       
-m | C       --multibyte-chars           List the character counts.       
-q       --quiet           Suppress invalid multi-byte character warnings.       
-w       --words           List the word counts.
OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:       
-c             Counts bytes.       
-C             Same as 
-m.       
-l             Counts lines.       
-m             Counts characters.       
-w             Counts words delimited by white space characters or new line
             characters.  Delimiting characters are Extended Unix Code (
EUC)
             characters from any code set defined by 
iswspace().
       If no option is specified, the default is 
-lwc (counts lines, words,
       and bytes.)
OPERANDS
       The following operand is supported:       
file               A path name of an input file. If no 
file operands are
               specified, the standard input is used.
USAGE
       See 
largefile(7) for the description of the behavior of 
wc when
       encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 2^31 bytes).
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       See 
environ(7) for descriptions of the following environment
       variables that affect the execution of 
wc: 
LANG, 
LC_ALL, 
LC_CTYPE,       
LC_MESSAGES, and 
NLSPATH.
EXIT STATUS
       0             Successful completion.       
>0             An error occurred.
ATTRIBUTES
       See 
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:   
/usr/bin/wc       +--------------------+-------------------+
       |  ATTRIBUTE TYPE    |  ATTRIBUTE VALUE  |
       +--------------------+-------------------+
       |CSI                 | Enabled           |
       +--------------------+-------------------+
       |Interface Stability | Committed         |
       +--------------------+-------------------+
       |Standard            | See 
standards(7). |
       +--------------------+-------------------+   
ksh93       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |  ATTRIBUTE TYPE    | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       |Interface Stability | See below.      |
       +--------------------+-----------------+
       The 
ksh93 built-in binding to 
/bin and 
/usr/bin is Volatile.  The
       built-in interfaces are Uncommitted.
SEE ALSO
       cksum(1), 
ksh93(1), 
isspace(3C), 
iswalpha(3C), 
iswspace(3C),       
setlocale(3C), 
attributes(7), 
environ(7), 
largefile(7), 
standards(7)                               March 13, 2008                          WC(1)