xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/seq/seq.1 (revision 5bb3134a8c21cb87b30e135ef168483f0333dabb)
1.\"	$NetBSD: seq.1,v 1.8 2013/04/07 17:37:45 jdf Exp $
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3.\" Copyright (c) 2005 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
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6.\" This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
7.\" by Brian Ginsbach.
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30.\" $FreeBSD$
31.\"
32.Dd June 20, 2020
33.Dt SEQ 1
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm seq
37.Nd print sequences of numbers
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.Nm
40.Op Fl w
41.Op Fl f Ar format
42.Op Fl s Ar string
43.Op Fl t Ar string
44.Op Ar first Op Ar incr
45.Ar last
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47The
48.Nm
49utility prints a sequence of numbers, one per line
50.Pq default ,
51from
52.Ar first
53.Pq default 1 ,
54to near
55.Ar last
56as possible, in increments of
57.Ar incr
58.Pq default 1 .
59When
60.Ar first
61is larger than
62.Ar last ,
63the default
64.Ar incr
65is -1.
66.Pp
67All numbers are interpreted as floating point.
68.Pp
69Normally integer values are printed as decimal integers.
70.Pp
71The
72.Nm
73utility accepts the following options:
74.Bl -tag -width Ar
75.It Fl f Ar format , Fl -format Ar format
76Use a
77.Xr printf 3
78style
79.Ar format
80to print each number.
81Only the
82.Cm A ,
83.Cm a ,
84.Cm E ,
85.Cm e ,
86.Cm F ,
87.Cm f ,
88.Cm G ,
89.Cm g ,
90and
91.Cm %
92conversion characters are valid, along with any optional
93flags and an optional numeric minimum field width or precision.
94The
95.Ar format
96can contain character escape sequences in backslash notation as
97defined in
98.St -ansiC .
99The default is
100.Cm %g .
101.It Fl s Ar string , Fl -separator Ar string
102Use
103.Ar string
104to separate numbers.
105The
106.Ar string
107can contain character escape sequences in backslash notation as
108defined in
109.St -ansiC .
110The default is
111.Cm \en .
112.It Fl t Ar string , Fl -terminator Ar string
113Use
114.Ar string
115to terminate sequence of numbers.
116The
117.Ar string
118can contain character escape sequences in backslash notation as
119defined in
120.St -ansiC .
121This option is useful when the default separator
122does not contain a
123.Cm \en .
124.It Fl w , Fl -fixed-width
125Equalize the widths of all numbers by padding with zeros as necessary.
126This option has no effect with the
127.Fl f
128option.
129If any sequence numbers will be printed in exponential notation,
130the default conversion is changed to
131.Cm %e .
132.El
133.Sh EXIT STATUS
134.Ex -std
135.Sh EXAMPLES
136Generate a sequence from 1 to 3 (included) with a default increment of 1:
137.Bd -literal -offset indent
138# seq 1 3
1391
1402
1413
142.Ed
143.Pp
144Generate a sequence from 3 to 1 (included) with a default increment of -1:
145.Bd -literal -offset indent
146# seq 3 1
1473
1482
1491
150.Ed
151.Pp
152Generate a sequence from 0 to 0.1 (included) with an increment of 0.05 and padding
153with leading zeroes.
154.Bd -literal -offset indent
155# seq -w 0 .05 .1
1560.00
1570.05
1580.10
159.Ed
160.Pp
161Generate a sequence from 1 to 3 (included) with a default increment of 1,
162a custom separator string and a custom terminator:
163.Bd -literal -offset indent
164# seq -s "-->" -t "[end of list]\\n" 1 3
1651-->2-->3-->[end of list]
166.Ed
167.Pp
168Generate a sequence from 1 to 2 (included) with an increment of 0.2 and
169print the results with two digits after the decimal point (using a
170.Xr printf 3
171style format):
172.Bd -literal -offset indent
173# seq -f %.2f 1 0.2 2
1741.00
1751.20
1761.40
1771.60
1781.80
1792.00
180.Ed
181.Sh SEE ALSO
182.Xr jot 1 ,
183.Xr printf 1 ,
184.Xr printf 3
185.Sh HISTORY
186The
187.Nm
188command first appeared in Version\~8
189.At .
190A
191.Nm
192command appeared in
193.Nx 3.0 ,
194and was ported to
195.Fx 9.0 .
196This command was based on the command of the same name in
197Plan 9 from Bell Labs and the GNU core utilities.
198The GNU
199.Nm
200command first appeared in the 1.13 shell utilities release.
201.Sh BUGS
202The
203.Fl w
204option does not handle the transition from pure floating point
205to exponent representation very well.
206The
207.Nm
208command is not bug for bug compatible with other implementations.
209