thead prints the first few lines of text files that are located in this the file tree.
The first few lines of a file can provide enough information to identify the contents of the file.
A full list of filenames can be piped to thead.
thead [dir...]
or
find $HOME/src -name "*.c" -print | sort | thead
#!/bin/bash # # @(#) thead v1.0 Prints header of files in tree. if [ "`echo $1|cut -c1`" = "-" ] then echo "$0: arg error" echo "usage: $0 [dir ...]" exit 1 fi case $# in 0) while read FILE do if file $FILE | fgrep text >/dev/null 2>&1 then echo "\n:::::::::::::::::::::" echo " $FILE" echo "\n:::::::::::::::::::::" head -15 $FILE fi done;; *) for NAME in $* do find $NAME -type f -print | sort | wile read FILE do if file $FILE | fgrep text >/dev/null 2>&1 then echo "\n:::::::::::::::::::::" echo " $FILE" echo "\n:::::::::::::::::::::" head -15 $FILE fi done done;; esac
thead $HOME
find $HOME -name "*.c" -print | sort | thead
thead /etc
thead /usr/include
find $HOME -ctime 0 -print | thead
for NAME in 'who | sed "s/^\([^ ]*\).*/\1/"' do done
find $HOME -name "*.c" -print | thead
and
find $HOME -name "*.c" -exec head {} \;