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FORTUNE(6)		     UNIX Reference Manual		    FORTUNE(6)

NAME
       fortune - print a random, hopefully interesting, adage

SYNOPSIS
       fortune [-acefilsw] [-n length] [ -m pattern] [[n%] file/dir/all]

DESCRIPTION
       When  fortune  is run with no arguments it prints out a random epigram.
       Epigrams are divided into several categories.

   Options
       The options are as follows:

       -a     Choose from all lists of maxims.

       -c     Show the cookie file from which the fortune came.

       -e     Consider all fortune files to be of equal size  (see  discussion
	      below on multiple files).

       -f     Print  out  the list of files which would be searched, but don't
	      print a fortune.

       -l     Long dictums only.  See -n on how ``long'' is  defined  in  this
	      sense.

       -m pattern
	      Print  out all fortunes which match the basic regular expression
	      pattern.	The syntax of these expressions depends	 on  how  your
	      system defines re_comp(3) or regcomp(3), but it should neverthe‐
	      less be similar to the syntax used in grep(1).

	      The fortunes are output to standard output, while the  names  of
	      the  file	 from which each fortune comes are printed to standard
	      error.  Either or both can be redirected; if standard output  is
	      redirected  to  a	 file, the result is a valid fortunes database
	      file.  If standard error is also redirected to  this  file,  the
	      result  is  still	 valid,	 but there will be ``bogus'' fortunes,
	      i.e. the filenames themselves, in parentheses.  This can be use‐
	      ful if you wish to remove the gathered matches from their origi‐
	      nal files, since each filename-record will precede  the  records
	      from the file it names.

       -n length
	      Set  the longest fortune length (in characters) considered to be
	      ``short'' (the default is 160).  All fortunes longer  than  this
	      are considered ``long''.	Be careful!  If you set the length too
	      short and ask for short fortunes, or too long and ask  for  long
	      ones, fortune goes into a never-ending thrash loop.

       -s     Short  apothegms	only.  See -n on which fortunes are considered
	      ``short''.

       -i     Ignore case for -m patterns.

       -w     Wait before termination for an amount of	time  calculated  from
	      the  number  of characters in the message.  This is useful if it
	      is executed as part of the logout procedure  to  guarantee  that
	      the message can be read before the screen is cleared.

       The  user  may  specify	alternate sayings.  You can specify a specific
       file, a directory which contains one or more files, or the special word
       all  which says to use all the standard databases.  Any of these may be
       preceded by a percentage, which is a number n between 0 and 100	inclu‐
       sive, followed by a %.  If it is, there will be a n percent probability
       that an adage will be picked from that file or directory. If  the  per‐
       centages	 do  not sum to 100, and there are specifications without per‐
       centages, the remaining percent will apply to those files and/or direc‐
       tories,	in  which  case	 the probability of selecting from one of them
       will be based on their relative sizes.

       As an example, given two databases  funny  and  not-funny,  with	 funny
       twice as big (in number of fortunes, not raw file size), saying

	      fortune funny not-funny

       will get you fortunes out of funny two-thirds of the time.  The command

	      fortune 90% funny 10% not-funny

       will  pick out 90% of its fortunes from funny (the ``10% not-funny'' is
       unnecessary, since 10% is all that's left).

       The -e option says to consider all files equal; thus

	      fortune -e funny not-funny

       is equivalent to

	      fortune 50% funny 50% not-funny

FILES
       Note: these are the defaults as defined at compile time.

       /usr/share/games/fortune
	      Directory for fortunes.

       If a particular set of fortunes is particularly unwanted, there	is  an
       easy  solution:	delete the associated .dat file.  This leaves the data
       intact, should the file later be wanted, but since  fortune  no	longer
       finds the pointers file, it ignores the text file.

BUGS
       The  supplied fortune databases have been attacked, in order to correct
       orthographical and  grammatical	errors,	 and  particularly  to	reduce
       redundancy and repetition and redundancy.  But especially to avoid rep‐
       etitiousness.  This has not been a complete success.  In	 the  process,
       some fortunes may also have been lost.

       The  fortune  databases are now divided into a larger number of smaller
       files, some organized by format (poetry, definitions), and some by con‐
       tent (religion, politics).

HISTORY
       This  version of fortune is based on the NetBSD fortune 1.4, but with a
       number of bug fixes and enhancements.

       The original fortune/strfile format used a single  file;	 strfile  read
       the  text  file	and converted it to null-delimited strings, which were
       stored after the table of pointers in the .dat file.  By NetBSD fortune
       1.4, this had changed to two separate files: the .dat file was only the
       header (the table of pointers, plus flags; see strfile.h), and the text
       strings	were  left in their own file.  The potential problem with this
       is that text file and header file may get out of synch, but the	advan‐
       tage  is	 that the text files can be easily edited without resorting to
       unstr, and there is a potential savings in disk space (on  the  assump‐
       tion  that  the	sysadmin kept both .dat file with strings and the text
       file).

       Many of the enhancements made over the NetBSD version assumed  a	 Linux
       system,	and  thus  caused  it to fail under other platforms, including
       BSD.  The source code has since been made more generic,	and  currently
       works  on  SunOS	 4.x as well as Linux, with support for more platforms
       expected in the future.	Note that some bugs were inadvertently discov‐
       ered and fixed during this process.

       At a guess, a great many people have worked on this program, many with‐
       out leaving attributions.

SEE ALSO
       re_comp(3), regcomp(3), strfile(1), unstr(1)

BSD Experimental	     19 April 94 [May. 97]		    FORTUNE(6)
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