type -- display plain text file or AppleWorks (AWP) file syntax: type [-h] [-f] [-u] [-l] [-p] [-t tab_string] ex: type this type ?:txt -h como that;type this -l Types contents of a file (any type, not just TXT). Wildcards are allowed. -h generates a headergiving the date/time the file was last modified. -f disables filtering of control characters; normally they are filtered out. -u and -l force alphabetic characters to display as uppercase or lowercase, respectively. -p begins a new page after the file is printed (useful when redirecting to printer) -t lets you specify a string to print in place of each TAB character (Ctrl-I). You may want to make an alias for 'type' with a tab string. Note: many file types do not contain plain ASCII text. This command knows how to interpret AWP files, but simply displays all other files byte-for-byte. If you pg a SYS file, for example, you will get a lot of garbage and a (probably) few readable messages. (see also: pg, como, strings, alias)