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 pr(1) -- print files
    The pr utility is a printing and pagination filter for text files. When multiple input files are specified, each is read, formatted, and written to standard output. By default, the input is separated ...
 printenv(1) -- print out the environment
    The printenv utility prints out the names and values of the variables in the environment, with one name/value pair per line. If name is specified, only its value is printed. Some shells may provide a ...
 printf(1) -- formatted output
    The printf utility formats and prints its arguments, after the first, under control of the format. The format is a character string which contains three types of objects: plain characters, which are s...
 ps(1) -- process status
    The ps utility displays a header line followed by lines containing information about your processes that have controlling terminals. This information is sorted by controlling terminal, then by process...
 psroff(1) -- send troff to PostScript printer
    The psroff program is actually just a shell script which invokes the groff(1) command to print the troff files to a PostScript printer.
 pushd(1) -- shell builtin commands
    Shell builtin commands are commands that can be executed within the running shell's process. Note that, in the case of csh(1) builtin commands, the command is executed in a subshell if it occurs as a...
 pwd(1) -- return working directory name
    The pwd utility writes the absolute pathname of the current working directory to the standard output. Some shells may provide a builtin pwd command which is similar or identical to this utility. Consu...
 quota(1) -- display disk usage and limits
    The quota utility displays users' disk usage and limits. By default only the user quotas are printed. The following options are available: -g Print group quotas for the group of which the user is a m...
 ranlib(1) -- generate index to archive.
    ranlib generates an index to the contents of an archive and stores it in the archive. The index lists each symbol defined by a member of an archive that is a relocatable object file. You may use nm -s...
 rcp(1) -- remote file copy
    The rcp utility copies files between machines. Each file or directory argument is either a remote file name of the form ``rname@rhost:path'', or a local file name (containing no `:' characters, or ...
 rcs(1) -- change RCS file attributes
    rcs creates new RCS files or changes attributes of existing ones. An RCS file contains multiple revisions of text, an access list, a change log, descriptive text, and some control attributes. For rcs ...
 rcsclean(1) -- clean up working files
    rcsclean removes files that are not being worked on. rcsclean -u also unlocks and removes files that are being worked on but have not changed. For each file given, rcsclean compares the working file a...
 rcsdiff(1) -- compare RCS revisions
    rcsdiff runs diff(1) to compare two revisions of each RCS file given. Pathnames matching an RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others denote working files. Names are paired as explained in ci(1). The op...
 rcsfreeze(1) -- freeze a configuration of sources checked in under RCS
    rcsfreeze assigns a symbolic revision number to a set of RCS files that form a valid configuration. The idea is to run rcsfreeze each time a new version is checked in. A unique symbolic name (C_number...
 rcsintro(1) -- introduction to RCS commands
    The Revision Control System (RCS) manages multiple revisions of files. RCS automates the storing, retrieval, logging, identification, and merging of revisions. RCS is useful for text that is revised f...
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