On Wed, 15 Nov 1995, Carlos Carvalho wrote: > Any decent man program handles compressed pages. If you have one that > doesn't it's a very good reason to ditch it.
true. > zcat runs fast enough from my experience. Yep, i've never had any cause to complain about speed problems with zcat - with 486-66 and faster problems, most CPUs on lightly-used linux machines are just sitting idle most of the time, disk speed is the real bottleneck. For large man pages, zcat may even be faster than cat due to the reduced disk access... > In fact, the only argument I have in favour of uncompressed pages > is that you can run a grep in the entire directory to search for > something. For example, I found the file /etc/gateways and didn't know > what it was about. I did a grep and found it in the routed page. zgrep can grep compressed files. i would have thought apropos would turn up some info on /etc/gateways but I tried it and it doesn't. Maybe we need a man page for gateways(5). One for networks(5) would be good too. Craig -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] * Unix Consulting: Installation, Configuration, & Support. * * --- Also, contact me if you need your Dos/Win/OS2 LAN connected to --- * * --- the Internet. --- *

