Manual Sections
The manual is generally split into eight numbered sections, organized as follows (on Research Unix, BSD, OS X and Linux):
| Section | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | General commands |
| 2 | System calls |
| 3 | Library functions, covering in particular the C standard library |
| 4 | Special files (usually devices, those found in /dev) and drivers |
| 5 | File formats and conventions |
| 6 | Games and screensavers |
| 7 | Miscellanea |
| 8 | System administration commands and daemons |
Unix System V uses a similar numbering scheme, except in a different order:
| Section | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | General commands |
| 1M | System administration commands and daemons |
| 2 | System calls |
| 3 | C library functions |
| 4 | File formats and conventions |
| 5 | Miscellanea |
| 6 | Games and screensavers |
| 7 | Special files (usually devices, those found in /dev) and drivers |
On some systems some of the following sections are available:
| Section | Description |
|---|---|
| 0 | C library header files |
| 9 | Kernel routines |
| n | Tcl/Tk keywords |
| x | The X Window System |
The sections are further subdivided by means of a suffix letter, such that section 3C is for C library calls, 3M is for the math library, and so on. A consequence of this is that section 8 (system administration commands) is sometimes relegated to the 1M subsection of the main commands section. Some subsection suffixes have a general meaning across sections:
| Subsection | Description |
|---|---|
| p | POSIX specifications |
| x | X Window System documentation |
Some versions of man cache the formatted versions of the last several pages viewed.
To see options you can use with command man, enter the command man man.
Read more about this topic: Man Page
Famous quotes containing the words manual and/or sections:
“Language ought to be the joint creation of poets and manual workers.”
—George Orwell (19031950)
“I have a new method of poetry. All you got to do is look over your notebooks ... or lay down on a couch, and think of anything that comes into your head, especially the miseries.... Then arrange in lines of two, three or four words each, dont bother about sentences, in sections of two, three or four lines each.”
—Allen Ginsberg (b. 1926)