Hi.

Try a 'script' utility (man script). This will write all that apears on
your terminal to a file which can be viewed or printed or whatever. Simply
type 'script', run your own script (oops, it could be wise to rename your
own script ;-) and when it finishes type ^d (CTRL-d). Then you'll want to
print a file named 'typescript'.

Regards,

Adam


On Fri, 14 Nov 2003, Akira Kitada wrote:

> Hi all.
>
> As the subject above implys, I'd like to print all of commands
> executed in a shell script.
> (because after a while, I always forget all of commands hided in scripts at all.
> )
>
> For example, if I have the following file named 'script',
>
>     -- contents of a file --
>     ls -l | awk '{print $5}'
>     -- end of file --
>
> and would invoked in command line like below,
>
>     $ ./script
>
> want to display something like
>
>     == ls -l | awk '{print $5}' ==
>     312
>     312
>     123313
>     31232
>     1233
>     12213
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
>
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