On Mon, 2006-05-08 at 09:06 -0400, Peter Teuben wrote: > you could explicitly code it via awk (i'm sure perl has a shortcut for this > too, but it's not in my head): > > awk '{if (NR>=453555 && NR<= 453590) print $0 }' your_big_file > > it might be a bit slow on big files though. > tail can also be used , but you have to do math: > > tail +453555 your_big_file | tail -45 > > give or take a line. awk is probably safer, since you don't have to think about > 0 vs. 1 and subtract two big numbers > Exactly, and your math is wrong. If you want to see lines 454555 to 453590 inclusive you would need to see 46 lines, thus "tail -46". Your command above would show lines 453555 to 453589 and not the last one. The other suggestion to use sed would be the cleanest that I have seen so far. > On Mon, 8 May 2006 carlosreimer@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > How can I see the content of lines 453555 to 453590 of a big text file? > > > > Thanks in advance! > > > > > -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list