column
Format stdin or a file into multiple columns. Columns are filled before rows; the default separator is a whitespace. More information: <https://manned.org/column>.
Install
- All systems
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curl cmd.cat/column.sh
- Debian
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apt-get install bsdmainutils - Ubuntu
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apt-get install bsdmainutils -
Alpine
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apk add util-linux - Arch Linux
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pacman -S util-linux - Kali Linux
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apt-get install bsdmainutils - CentOS
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yum install util-linux - Fedora
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dnf install util-linux - Windows (WSL2)
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sudo apt-get updatesudo apt-get install bsdmainutils - OS X
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brew install util-linux - Raspbian
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apt-get install bsdmainutils - Docker
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docker run cmd.cat/column columnpowered by Commando
Format stdin or a file into multiple columns. Columns are filled before rows; the default separator is a whitespace. More information: <https://manned.org/column>.
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Format the output of a command for a 30 characters wide display:
printf "header1 header2\nbar foo\n" | column --output-width 30 -
Split columns automatically and auto-align them in a tabular format:
printf "header1 header2\nbar foo\n" | column --table -
Specify the column delimiter character for the `--table` option (e.g. "," for CSV) (defaults to whitespace):
printf "header1,header2\nbar,foo\n" | column --table --separator , -
Fill rows before filling columns:
printf "header1\nbar\nfoobar\n" | column --output-width 30 --fillrows
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