NAME
wtf —
look up terms
SYNOPSIS
wtf |
[-f
dbfile]
[-o]
[is] term
... |
DESCRIPTION
The
wtf utility looks up the meaning of one or more
term operands specified on the command line.
term will first be searched for as an acronym in the
acronym databases, which are expected to be in the format
“acronym[tab]meaning”. If no match has been found,
wtf will check to see if the term is known by
whatis(1),
pkg_info(1), or, when called
from within a pkgsrc package directory, pkgsrc's internal help facility,
“make help topic=XXX”.
The optional
is operand will be ignored, allowing the
fairly natural “wtf is WTF” usage.
The following option is available:
-
-
- -f
dbfile
- Overrides the default list of acronym databases, bypassing
the value of the
ACRONYMDB
variable. Unlike this
variable the -f option only accepts one file name as an
argument, but it may be given multiple times to specify more than one file
to use.
-
-
- -o
- Include acronyms that could be considered offensive to
some. Please consult
fortune(6) for more
information about the -o flag.
ENVIRONMENT
-
-
ACRONYMDB
- The default list of acronym databases may be overridden by
setting the environment variable
ACRONYMDB
to the
name of one or more space-separated file names of acronym databases.
FILES
- /usr/share/misc/acronyms
- default acronym database.
- /usr/share/misc/acronyms-o
- default offensive acronym database.
- /usr/share/misc/acronyms.comp
- default computer-related acronym database.
SEE ALSO
make(1),
pkg_info(1),
whatis(1),
fortune(6)
HISTORY
wtf first appeared in
NetBSD 1.5.
Initially it only translated acronyms; functionality to look up the meaning of
terms in other sources was added later.