Provided by: ugrep_6.4.1+dfsg-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ugrep, ug -- file pattern searcher

SYNOPSIS

       ugrep [OPTIONS] [-i] [-Q|PATTERN] [-e PATTERN] [-N PATTERN] [-f FILE]
             [-F|-G|-P|-Z] [-U] [-m [MIN,][MAX]] [--bool [--files|--lines]]
             [-r|-R|-1|...|-9|-10|...] [-t TYPES] [-g GLOBS] [--sort[=KEY]]
             [-l|-c] [-o] [-n] [-k] [-b] [-A NUM] [-B NUM] [-C NUM] [-y]
             [--color[=WHEN]|--colour[=WHEN]] [--pretty] [--pager[=COMMAND]]
             [--hexdump|--csv|--json|--xml] [-I] [-z] [--zmax=NUM] [FILE ...]

DESCRIPTION

       The  ugrep  utility  searches  any  given  input  files, selecting files and lines that match one or more
       patterns specified as regular expressions or as fixed strings.  A pattern matches  multiple  input  lines
       when the pattern's regular expression matches one or more newlines.  An empty pattern matches every line.
       Each input line that matches at least one of the patterns is written to the standard output.

       The  ug  command  is intended for interactive searching, using a .ugrep configuration file located in the
       working directory or home directory, see CONFIGURATION.  ug is  equivalent  to  ugrep  --config  --pretty
       --sort to load a .ugrep file, enhance the terminal output, and sort files by name.

       The  ugrep+  and  ug+  commands are the same as the ugrep and ug commands, but also use filters to search
       pdfs, documents, e-books, and image metadata, when the corresponding filter tools are installed.

       A list of matching files is produced with option -l (--files-with-matches).  Option -c  (--count)  counts
       the  number  of  matching lines.  When combined with option -o, counts the total number of matches.  When
       combined with option -m1, (--min-count=1), skips files with zero matches.

       The default pattern syntax is an extended form of the POSIX ERE syntax, same as  option  -E  (--extended-
       regexp).   Try ug --help regex for help with pattern syntax and how to use logical connectives to specify
       Boolean search queries with option -% (--bool) to match lines and -%% (--bool --files)  to  match  files.
       Options -F (--fixed-strings), -G (--basic-regexp) and -P (--perl-regexp) specify other pattern syntaxes.

       Option  -i (--ignore-case) ignores case in ASCII patterns.  When combined with option -P, ignores case in
       Unicode patterns.  Option -j (--smart-case) enables -i only if the search patterns are specified in lower
       case.

       Fuzzy (approximate) search is specified with option -Z (--fuzzy) with an  optional  argument  to  control
       character insertions, deletions, and/or substitutions.  Try ug --help fuzzy for help with fuzzy search.

       Note  that  pattern  `.'  matches  any  non-newline character.  Pattern `\n' matches a newline character.
       Multiple lines may be matched with patterns that match one or more newline characters.

       The empty pattern "" matches all lines.  Other empty-matching patterns do not.  For example, the  pattern
       `a*' will match one or more a's.  Option -Y forces empty matches for compatibility with other grep tools.

       Option -f FILE matches patterns specified in FILE.

       By  default  Unicode patterns are matched.  Option -U (--ascii or --binary) disables Unicode matching for
       ASCII and binary pattern matching.  Non-Unicode matching is more efficient.

       ugrep accepts input of various encoding formats and normalizes the output to  UTF-8.   When  a  UTF  byte
       order  mark is present in the input, the input is automatically normalized.  An input encoding format may
       be specified with option --encoding.

       If no FILE arguments are specified and standard input is read from a  terminal,  recursive  searches  are
       performed as if -r is specified.  To force reading from standard input, specify `-' as a FILE argument.

       Directories specified as FILE arguments are searched without recursing deeper into subdirectories, unless
       -R, -r, or -2...-9 is specified to search subdirectories recursively (up to the specified depth.)

       Option -I (--ignore-binary) ignores binary files.  A binary file is a file with non-text content.  A file
       with zero bytes or invalid UTF formatting is considered binary.

       Hidden  files  and  directories  are ignored in recursive searches.  Option -. (--hidden) includes hidden
       files and directories in recursive searches.

       To match the names of files to search and the names of  directories  to  recurse,  one  or  more  of  the
       following  options  may  be  specified.   Option  -O  specifies one or more filename extensions to match.
       Option -t specifies one or more file types to search (-t list  outputs  a  list  of  types.)   Option  -g
       specifies a gitignore-style glob pattern to match filenames.  Option --ignore-files specifies a file with
       gitignore-style  globs  to  ignore directories and files.  Try ug --help globs for help with filename and
       directory name matching.  See also section GLOBBING.

       Compressed files and archives are  searched  with  option  -z  (--decompress).   When  used  with  option
       --zmax=NUM,  searches  the  contents  of  compressed  files and archives stored within archives up to NUM
       levels.

       A query terminal user interface (TUI) is  opened  with  -Q  (--query)  to  interactively  specify  search
       patterns and view search results.  A PATTERN argument requires -e PATTERN to start the query TUI with the
       specified pattern.

       Output  to  a  terminal  for  viewing  is enhanced with --pretty, which is enabled by default with the ug
       command.

       A terminal output pager is enabled with --pager.

       Customized output is produced with option --format or --replace.  Try ug  --help  format  for  help  with
       custom  formatting  of  the  output.   Predefined formats include CSV with option --csv, JSON with option
       --json, and XML with option --xml.  Hexdumps are output with option -X (--hex) or with  option  --hexdump
       to customize hexdumps.  See also section FORMAT.

       A  `--'  signals the end of options; the rest of the parameters are FILE arguments, allowing filenames to
       begin with a `-' character.

       Long options may start with `--no-' to disable, when applicable.

       ug --help WHAT displays help on options related to WHAT.

       The following options are available:

       -A NUM, --after-context=NUM
              Output NUM lines of trailing context after matching lines.   Places  a  --group-separator  between
              contiguous  groups  of  matches.   If  -o  is  specified, output the match with context to fit NUM
              columns after the match or shortens the match.  See also options -B, -C and -y.

       -a, --text
              Process a binary file as if it were text.  This is equivalent to the  --binary-files=text  option.
              This  option  might output binary garbage to the terminal, which can have problematic consequences
              if the terminal driver interprets some of it as commands.

       --all, -@
              Search all files except hidden: cancel previous file and directory search restrictions and  cancel
              --ignore-binary and --ignore-files when specified.  Restrictions specified after this option, i.e.
              to  the right, are still applied.  For example, -@I searches all non-binary files and -@. searches
              all files including hidden files.  Note that hidden files  and  directories  are  never  searched,
              unless option -. or --hidden is specified.

       --and [-e] PATTERN
              Specify  additional  PATTERN  that  must  match.   Additional  -e PATTERN following this option is
              considered an alternative pattern to match, i.e. each -e is interpreted as an OR pattern  enclosed
              within  the  AND.  For example, -e A -e B --and -e C -e D matches lines with (`A' or `B') and (`C'
              or `D').  Note that multiple -e PATTERN are alternations that  bind  more  tightly  together  than
              --and.   Option  --stats  displays the search patterns applied.  See also options --not, --andnot,
              --bool, --files and --lines.

       --andnot [-e] PATTERN
              Combines --and --not.  See also options --and, --not and --bool.

       -B NUM, --before-context=NUM
              Output NUM lines of leading context before matching lines.   Places  a  --group-separator  between
              contiguous  groups  of  matches.   If  -o  is  specified, output the match with context to fit NUM
              columns before the match or shortens the match.  See also options -A, -C and -y.

       -b, --byte-offset
              The offset in bytes of a pattern match is displayed in front of the respective matched line.  When
              -u is specified, displays the offset for each pattern matched on the same line.  Byte offsets  are
              exact  for  ASCII, UTF-8 and raw binary input.  Otherwise, the byte offset in the UTF-8 normalized
              input is displayed.

       --binary-files=TYPE
              Controls searching and  reporting  pattern  matches  in  binary  files.   TYPE  can  be  `binary',
              `without-match`, `text`, `hex` and `with-hex'.  The default is `binary' to search binary files and
              to  report  a match without displaying the match.  `without-match' ignores binary matches.  `text'
              treats all binary files as text, which might output binary garbage to the terminal, which can have
              problematic consequences if the terminal driver interprets some of it as commands.  `hex'  reports
              all  matches  in hexadecimal.  `with-hex' only reports binary matches in hexadecimal, leaving text
              matches alone.  A match is considered binary when matching a zero  byte  or  invalid  UTF.   Short
              options are -a, -I, -U, -W and -X.

       --bool, -%, -%%
              Specifies  Boolean  query  patterns.   A  Boolean  query pattern is composed of `AND', `OR', `NOT'
              operators and grouping with `(' `)'.  Spacing between subpatterns is the same as `AND', `|' is the
              same as `OR' and a `-' is the same as `NOT'.  The `OR' operator binds  more  tightly  than  `AND'.
              For  example,  --bool  'A|B  C|D'  matches lines with (`A' or `B') and (`C' or `D'), --bool 'A -B'
              matches lines with `A' and not `B'.  Operators `AND', `OR', `NOT'  require  proper  spacing.   For
              example,  --bool  'A  OR B AND C OR D' matches lines with (`A' or `B') and (`C' or `D'), --bool 'A
              AND NOT B' matches lines with `A' without  `B'.   Quoted  subpatterns  are  matched  literally  as
              strings.  For example, --bool 'A "AND"|"OR"' matches lines with `A' and also either `AND' or `OR'.
              Parentheses  are used for grouping.  For example, --bool '(A B)|C' matches lines with `A' and `B',
              or lines with `C'.  Note that all subpatterns in a Boolean query pattern are regular  expressions,
              unless  -F  is  specified.   Options  -E,  -F,  -G, -P and -Z can be combined with --bool to match
              subpatterns as strings or regular expressions (-E is the default.)  This option does not apply  to
              -f  FILE  patterns.   The  double short option -%% enables options --bool --files.  Option --stats
              displays the Boolean search patterns applied.  See also options --and,  --andnot,  --not,  --files
              and --lines.

       --break
              Adds a line break between results from different files.  This option is enabled by --heading.

       -C NUM, --context=NUM
              Output  NUM  lines  of  leading  and  trailing  context  surrounding each matching line.  Places a
              --group-separator between contiguous groups of matches.  If -o is specified, output the match with
              context to fit NUM columns before and after the match or shortens the match.  See also options -A,
              -B and -y.

       -c, --count
              Only a count of selected lines is written to standard output.  If -o or -u  is  specified,  counts
              the  number of patterns matched.  If -v is specified, counts the number of non-matching lines.  If
              -m1, (with a comma or --min-count=1) is specified, counts only matching files  without  outputting
              zero matches.

       --color[=WHEN], --colour[=WHEN]
              Mark  up  the  matching  text  with the colors specified with option --colors or the GREP_COLOR or
              GREP_COLORS environment variable.  WHEN can be `never', `always', or `auto', where `auto' marks up
              matches only when output on a terminal.  The default is `auto'.

       --colors=COLORS, --colours=COLORS
              Use COLORS to mark up text.  COLORS is a colon-separated list of  one  or  more  parameters  `sl='
              (selected  line), `cx=' (context line), `mt=' (matched text), `ms=' (match selected), `mc=' (match
              context), `fn=' (file name), `ln=' (line number), `cn='  (column  number),  `bn='  (byte  offset),
              `se='  (separator),  `qp='  (TUI  prompt), `qe=' (TUI errors), `qr=' (TUI regex), `qm=' (TUI regex
              meta characters), `ql=' (TUI regex lists and  literals),  `qb='  (TUI  regex  braces).   Parameter
              values  are ANSI SGR color codes or `k' (black), `r' (red), `g' (green), `y' (yellow), `b' (blue),
              `m' (magenta), `c' (cyan), `w' (white), or  leave  empty  for  no  color.   Upper  case  specifies
              background colors.  A `+' qualifies a color as bright.  A foreground and a background color may be
              combined  with  font  properties  `n'  (normal),  `f'  (faint), `h' (highlight), `i' (invert), `u'
              (underline).  Parameter `hl' enables file name hyperlinks.  Parameter `rv' reverses the `sl='  and
              `cx='  parameters  when  option  -v is specified.  Selectively overrides GREP_COLORS.  Legacy grep
              single parameter codes may be specified, for example --colors='7;32'  or  --colors=ig  to  set  ms
              (match selected).

       --config[=FILE], ---[FILE]
              Use configuration FILE.  The default FILE is `.ugrep'.  The working directory is checked first for
              FILE,  then the home directory.  The options specified in the configuration FILE are parsed first,
              followed by the remaining options specified on the command line.   The  ug  command  automatically
              loads a `.ugrep' configuration file, unless --config=FILE or --no-config is specified.

       --no-config
              Do not automatically load the default .ugrep configuration file.

       --no-confirm
              Do not confirm actions in -Q query TUI.  The default is confirm.

       --cpp  Output file matches in C++.  See also options --format and -u.

       --csv  Output file matches in CSV.  If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified, additional values are output.  See
              also options --format and -u.

       -D ACTION, --devices=ACTION
              If  an  input  file  is a device, FIFO or socket, use ACTION to process it.  By default, ACTION is
              `skip', which means that devices are silently skipped.  If ACTION is `read', devices read just  as
              if they were ordinary files.

       -d ACTION, --directories=ACTION
              If  an  input  file is a directory, use ACTION to process it.  By default, ACTION is `skip', i.e.,
              silently skip directories unless specified on the command line.  If ACTION is  `read',  warn  when
              directories  are  read  as  input.   If  ACTION is `recurse', read all files under each directory,
              recursively, following symbolic links only if they are on the command line.  This is equivalent to
              the -r option.   If  ACTION  is  `dereference-recurse',  read  all  files  under  each  directory,
              recursively, following symbolic links.  This is equivalent to the -R option.

       --delay=DELAY
              Set the default -Q key response delay.  Default is 3 for 300ms.

       --depth=[MIN,][MAX], -1, -2, -3, ... -9, -10, -11, ...
              Restrict  recursive  searches from MIN to MAX directory levels deep, where -1 (--depth=1) searches
              the specified path without recursing into subdirectories.  The short forms -3 -5,  -3-5  and  -3,5
              search 3 to 5 levels deep.  Enables -r if -R or -r is not specified.

       --dotall
              Dot  `.'  in  regular expressions matches anything, including newline.  Note that `.*' matches all
              input and should not be used.

       -E, --extended-regexp
              Interpret patterns as extended regular expressions (EREs). This is the default.

       -e PATTERN, --regexp=PATTERN
              Specify a PATTERN to search the input.  An input line  is  selected  if  it  matches  any  of  the
              specified  patterns.   This option is useful when multiple -e options are used to specify multiple
              patterns, or when a pattern begins with a dash (`-'), or to specify a pattern after option  -f  or
              after the FILE arguments.

       --encoding=ENCODING
              The  encoding  format  of the input.  The default ENCODING is binary and UTF-8 which are the same.
              Note that option -U specifies binary PATTERN matching (text matching is  the  default.)   ENCODING
              can  be:  `binary',  `ASCII',  `UTF-8',  `UTF-16',  `UTF-16BE',  `UTF-16LE', `UTF-32', `UTF-32BE',
              `UTF-32LE',  `LATIN1',  `ISO-8859-1',  `ISO-8859-2',  `ISO-8859-3',  `ISO-8859-4',   `ISO-8859-5',
              `ISO-8859-6',    `ISO-8859-7',    `ISO-8859-8',    `ISO-8859-9',   `ISO-8859-10',   `ISO-8859-11',
              `ISO-8859-13', `ISO-8859-14', `ISO-8859-15', `ISO-8859-16', `MAC', `MACROMAN', `EBCDIC',  `CP437',
              `CP850',  `CP858', `CP1250', `CP1251', `CP1252', `CP1253', `CP1254', `CP1255', `CP1256', `CP1257',
              `CP1258', `KOI8-R', `KOI8-U', `KOI8-RU'.

       --exclude=GLOB
              Exclude files whose name matches GLOB, same as -g ^GLOB.  GLOB can use **,  *,  ?,  and  [...]  as
              wildcards  and  \ to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally.  When GLOB contains a `/',
              full pathnames are matched.  Otherwise  basenames  are  matched.   When  GLOB  ends  with  a  `/',
              directories  are  excluded  as if --exclude-dir is specified.  Otherwise files are excluded.  Note
              that --exclude patterns take priority over --include patterns.  GLOB should be quoted  to  prevent
              shell globbing.  This option may be repeated.

       --exclude-dir=GLOB
              Exclude  directories whose name matches GLOB from recursive searches, same as -g ^GLOB/.  GLOB can
              use **, *, ?, and [...] as wildcards and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash  character  literally.
              When GLOB contains a `/', full pathnames are matched.  Otherwise basenames are matched.  Note that
              --exclude-dir  patterns  take  priority  over  --include-dir  patterns.   GLOB should be quoted to
              prevent shell globbing.  This option may be repeated.

       --exclude-from=FILE
              Read the globs from FILE and skip files and directories whose name matches one or more  globs.   A
              glob  can  use  **,  *, ?, and [...] as wildcards and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash character
              literally.  When a glob contains a `/', full  pathnames  are  matched.   Otherwise  basenames  are
              matched.   When a glob ends with a `/', directories are excluded as if --exclude-dir is specified.
              Otherwise files  are  excluded.   A  glob  starting  with  a  `!'  overrides  previously-specified
              exclusions  by  including  matching  files.  Lines starting with a `#' and empty lines in FILE are
              ignored.  When FILE is a `-', standard input is read.  This option may be repeated.

       --exclude-fs=MOUNTS
              Exclude file systems specified by MOUNTS from recursive searches.   MOUNTS  is  a  comma-separated
              list  of  mount  points  or pathnames to directories.  When MOUNTS is not specified, only descends
              into the file systems associated with the  specified  file  and  directory  search  targets,  i.e.
              excludes   all   other   file   systems.    Note   that  --exclude-fs=MOUNTS  take  priority  over
              --include-fs=MOUNTS.  This option may be repeated.

       -F, --fixed-strings
              Interpret pattern as a set of fixed strings, separated by newlines, any of which is to be matched.
              This makes ugrep behave as fgrep.  If a PATTERN is specified, or -e PATTERN or  -N  PATTERN,  then
              this  option  has  no  effect on -f FILE patterns to allow -f FILE patterns to narrow or widen the
              scope of the PATTERN search.

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
              Read newline-separated patterns from FILE.  White space in patterns is significant.   Empty  lines
              in  FILE  are ignored.  If FILE does not exist, the GREP_PATH environment variable is used as path
              to FILE.  If that fails, looks for FILE in /usr/local/share/ugrep/patterns.  When FILE is  a  `-',
              standard  input  is  read.  Empty files contain no patterns; thus nothing is matched.  This option
              may be repeated.

       --filter=COMMANDS
              Filter files through the specified COMMANDS first before searching.  COMMANDS is a comma-separated
              list of `exts:command [option ...]', where `exts' is a comma-separated list of filename extensions
              and `command' is a filter utility.  Files matching one of `exts' are filtered.  When `exts'  is  a
              `*',  all  files  are filtered.  One or more `option' separated by spacing may be specified, which
              are passed verbatim to the command.  A `%' as `option' expands into the pathname to  search.   For
              example,  --filter='pdf:pdftotext  %  -'  searches  PDF  files.   The  `%' expands into a `-' when
              searching standard input.  When a `%' is not specified, a filter utility should read from standard
              input and write to standard output.  Option --label=.ext may be used to  specify  extension  `ext'
              when searching standard input.  This option may be repeated.

       --filter-magic-label=[+]LABEL:MAGIC
              Associate  LABEL  with  files  whose  signature "magic bytes" match the MAGIC regex pattern.  Only
              files that have no filename extension are labeled, unless +LABEL is specified.  When LABEL matches
              an extension specified in --filter=COMMANDS, the corresponding command is  invoked.   This  option
              may be repeated.

       --format=FORMAT
              Output  FORMAT-formatted  matches.   For example --format='%f:%n:%O%~' outputs matching lines `%O'
              with filename `%f` and line number `%n' followed by a newline `%~'.  If -P  is  specified,  FORMAT
              may  include `%1' to `%9', `%[NUM]#' and `%[NAME]#' to output group captures.  A `%%' outputs `%'.
              See `ugrep --help format' and  `man  ugrep'  section  FORMAT  for  details.   When  option  -o  is
              specified, option -u is also enabled.  Context options -A, -B, -C and -y are ignored.

       --free-space
              Spacing (blanks and tabs) in regular expressions are ignored.

       -G, --basic-regexp
              Interpret patterns as basic regular expressions (BREs).

       -g GLOBS, --glob=GLOBS, --iglob=GLOBS
              Only  search  files  whose  name  matches  the  specified  comma-separated  list of GLOBS, same as
              --include=glob for each `glob' in GLOBS.  When a `glob' is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip  files
              whose  name  matches `glob', same as --exclude='glob'.  When `glob' contains a `/', full pathnames
              are matched.  Otherwise basenames are matched.  When `glob'  ends  with  a  `/',  directories  are
              matched, same as --include-dir='glob' and --exclude-dir='glob'.  A leading `/' matches the working
              directory.   Option  --iglob performs case-insensitive name matching.  This option may be repeated
              and may be combined with options -M, -O and -t to expand searches.  See `ugrep --help  globs'  and
              `man ugrep' section GLOBBING for details.

       --glob-ignore-case
              Perform case-insensitive glob matching in general.

       --group-separator[=SEP]
              Use  SEP  as  a group separator for context options -A, -B and -C.  The default is a double hyphen
              (`--').

       --no-group-separator
              Removes the group separator line from the output for context options -A, -B and -C.

       -H, --with-filename
              Always print the filename with output lines.  This is the default when there is more than one file
              to search.

       -h, --no-filename
              Never print filenames with output lines.  This is the default when there is only one file (or only
              standard input) to search.

       --heading, -+
              Group matches per file.  Adds a heading and a line break between  results  from  different  files.
              This option is enabled by --pretty when the output is sent to a terminal.

       --help [WHAT], -? [WHAT]
              Display  a  help  message  on options related to WHAT when specified.  In addition, `--help regex'
              displays an overview of regular expressions, `--help globs' displays an overview  of  glob  syntax
              and  conventions.   `--help  fuzzy'  displays  details  of fuzzy search with option -Z and `--help
              format' displays a list of --format fields.

       --hexdump[=[1-8][a][bch][A[NUM]][B[NUM]][C[NUM]]]
              Output matches in 1 to 8 columns of 8 hexadecimal octets.  The default is 2 columns or  16  octets
              per line.  Option `a' outputs a `*' for all hex lines that are identical to the previous hex line,
              `b'  removes  all  space  breaks,  `c'  removes the character column, `h' removes hex spacing, `A'
              includes up to NUM hex lines after the match, `B' includes up to NUM hex lines  before  the  match
              and  `C'  includes up to NUM hex lines.  When NUM is omitted, the matching line is included in the
              output.  See also options -U, -W and -X.

       --hidden, -.
              Search hidden files and directories.

       --hyperlink[=[PREFIX][+]]
              Hyperlinks are enabled for file names when colors are enabled.  Same as --colors=hl.  When  PREFIX
              is specified, replaces file:// with PREFIX:// in the hyperlink.  A `+' includes the line number in
              the hyperlink and when option -k is specified, the column number.

       -I, --ignore-binary
              Ignore  matches  in  binary  files.  This option is equivalent to the --binary-files=without-match
              option.

       -i, --ignore-case
              Perform case insensitive matching.  By default, ugrep is case sensitive.  By default, this  option
              applies to ASCII letters only.  Use options -P and -i for Unicode case insensitive matching.

       --ignore-files[=FILE]
              Ignore  files  and  directories  matching  the globs in each FILE that is encountered in recursive
              searches.  The default FILE is `.gitignore'.   Matching  files  and  directories  located  in  the
              directory of the FILE and in subdirectories below are ignored.  Globbing syntax is the same as the
              --exclude-from=FILE  gitignore  syntax,  but  files  and  directories are excluded instead of only
              files.  Directories are specifically excluded when the glob ends in a `/'.  Files and  directories
              explicitly  specified as command line arguments are never ignored.  This option may be repeated to
              specify additional files.

       --no-ignore-files
              Do not ignore files, i.e. cancel --ignore-files when specified.

       --include=GLOB
              Only search files whose name matches GLOB, same as -g GLOB.  GLOB can use **, *, ?, and  [...]  as
              wildcards  and  \ to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally.  When GLOB contains a `/',
              full pathnames are matched.  Otherwise  basenames  are  matched.   When  GLOB  ends  with  a  `/',
              directories  are  included  as if --include-dir is specified.  Otherwise files are included.  Note
              that --exclude patterns take priority over --include patterns.  GLOB should be quoted  to  prevent
              shell globbing.  This option may be repeated.

       --include-dir=GLOB
              Only  directories  whose  name  matches GLOB are included in recursive searches, same as -g GLOB/.
              GLOB can use **, *, ?, and [...] as wildcards and \ to quote a  wildcard  or  backslash  character
              literally.   When  GLOB  contains  a  `/',  full  pathnames  are matched.  Otherwise basenames are
              matched.  Note that --exclude-dir patterns take priority over --include-dir patterns.  GLOB should
              be quoted to prevent shell globbing.  This option may be repeated.

       --include-from=FILE
              Read the globs from FILE and search only files and directories whose  name  matches  one  or  more
              globs.   A  glob  can  use **, *, ?, and [...] as wildcards and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash
              character literally.  When a glob contains a `/', full pathnames are matched.  Otherwise basenames
              are matched.  When a glob ends with a  `/',  directories  are  included  as  if  --include-dir  is
              specified.    Otherwise   files   are   included.    A   glob   starting   with  a  `!'  overrides
              previously-specified inclusions by excluding matching files.  Lines starting with a `#' and  empty
              lines  in  FILE  are  ignored.   When  FILE  is a `-', standard input is read.  This option may be
              repeated.

       --include-fs=MOUNTS
              Only file  systems  specified  by  MOUNTS  are  included  in  recursive  searches.   MOUNTS  is  a
              comma-separated  list  of mount points or pathnames to directories.  When MOUNTS is not specified,
              restricts recursive searches to the file system of the working directory, same  as  --include-fs=.
              (dot).  Note  that --exclude-fs=MOUNTS take priority over --include-fs=MOUNTS.  This option may be
              repeated.

       --index
              Perform fast index-based recursive search.  This option assumes, but does not require, that  files
              are indexed with ugrep-indexer.  This option also enables option -r or --recursive.  Skips indexed
              non-matching  files,  archives  and compressed files.  Significant acceleration may be achieved on
              cold (not file-cached) and large file systems, or any file system that is slow  to  search.   Note
              that  the start-up time to search may be increased when complex search patterns are specified that
              contain large Unicode character classes combined with `*' or `+' repeats, which should be avoided.
              Option -U (--ascii) improves performance.  Option --stats displays an index search report.

       -J NUM, --jobs=NUM
              Specifies the number of threads spawned to search files.  By default an optimum number of  threads
              is spawned to search files simultaneously.  -J1 disables threading: files are searched in the same
              order as specified.

       -j, --smart-case
              Perform  case  insensitive matching, unless a pattern is specified with a literal upper case ASCII
              letter.

       --json Output file matches in JSON.  If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified,  additional  values  are  output.
              See also options --format and -u.

       -K [MIN,][MAX], --range=[MIN,][MAX], --min-line=MIN, --max-line=MAX
              Start searching at line MIN, stop at line MAX when specified.

       -k, --column-number
              The  column  number  of  a  pattern  match  is  displayed in front of the respective matched line,
              starting at column 1.  Tabs are expanded in counting columns, see also option --tabs.

       -L, --files-without-match
              Only the names of files not containing selected lines are written to standard  output.   Pathnames
              are  listed  once  per  file  searched.  If the standard input is searched, the string ``(standard
              input)'' is written.

       -l, --files-with-matches
              Only the names of files containing selected lines are written to standard output.  ugrep will only
              search a file until a match has been found, making searches potentially less expensive.  Pathnames
              are listed once per file searched.  If the standard input  is  searched,  the  string  ``(standard
              input)'' is written.

       --label=LABEL
              Displays  the  LABEL value when input is read from standard input where a file name would normally
              be printed in the output.  Associates a filename extension with standard input when  LABEL  has  a
              suffix.  The default value is `(standard input)'.

       --line-buffered
              Force output to be line buffered instead of block buffered.

       --lines
              Boolean line matching mode for option --bool, the default mode.

       -M MAGIC, --file-magic=MAGIC
              Only  search files matching the magic signature pattern MAGIC.  The signature "magic bytes" at the
              start of a file are compared to the  MAGIC  regex  pattern.   When  matching,  the  file  will  be
              searched.   When  MAGIC  is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files with matching MAGIC signatures.
              This option may be repeated and may be combined with options -O  and  -t  to  expand  the  search.
              Every file on the search path is read, making searches potentially more expensive.

       -m [MIN,][MAX], --min-count=MIN, --max-count=MAX
              Require  MIN  matches,  stop  after  MAX  matches when specified.  Output MIN to MAX matches.  For
              example, -m1 outputs the first match and -cm1, (with a comma) counts nonzero matches.   If  -u  is
              specified, each individual match counts.  See also option -K.

       --match
              Match all input.  Same as specifying an empty pattern to search.

       --max-files=NUM
              Restrict  the number of files matched to NUM.  Note that --sort or -J1 may be specified to produce
              replicable results.  If --sort is specified, the number of threads spawned is limited to NUM.

       --mmap[=MAX]
              Use memory maps to search files.  By default, memory maps are used  under  certain  conditions  to
              improve performance.  When MAX is specified, use up to MAX mmap memory per thread.

       -N PATTERN, --neg-regexp=PATTERN
              Specify  a  negative  PATTERN  to reject specific -e PATTERN matches with a counter pattern.  Note
              that longer patterns take precedence over shorter patterns, i.e. a negative pattern must be of the
              same length or longer to reject matching patterns.  Option -N cannot be specified with  -P.   This
              option may be repeated.

       -n, --line-number
              Each  output  line  is  preceded by its relative line number in the file, starting at line 1.  The
              line number counter is reset for each file processed.

       --not [-e] PATTERN
              Specifies that PATTERN should not match.  Note that -e A --not -e B  matches  lines  with  `A'  or
              lines  without  a  `B'.   To  match  lines  with `A' that have no `B', specify -e A --andnot -e B.
              Option --stats displays the search patterns applied.  See also options  --and,  --andnot,  --bool,
              --files and --lines.

       -O EXTENSIONS, --file-extension=EXTENSIONS
              Only  search  files  whose  filename  extensions  match  the  specified  comma-separated  list  of
              EXTENSIONS, same as -g '*.ext' for each `ext' in EXTENSIONS.  When an `ext' is preceded by  a  `!'
              or  a  `^',  skip files whose filename extensions matches `ext', same as -g '^*.ext'.  This option
              may be repeated and may be combined with options -g, -M and -t to expand the recursive search.

       -o, --only-matching
              Only the matching part of a pattern match is output.  If -A, -B or -C is specified, fits the match
              and its context on a line within the specified number of columns.

       --only-line-number
              Only the line number of a matching line is output.  The line number counter is reset for each file
              processed.

       --files, -%%
              Boolean file matching mode, the opposite of --lines.  When combined with option --bool, matches  a
              file  if  all  Boolean conditions are satisfied.  For example, --bool --files 'A B|C -D' matches a
              file if some lines match `A', and some lines match either `B' or `C', and  no  line  matches  `D'.
              See  also options --and, --andnot, --not, --bool and --lines.  The double short option -%% enables
              options --bool --files.

       -P, --perl-regexp
              Interpret PATTERN as a Perl regular expression using  PCRE2.   Note  that  Perl  pattern  matching
              differs from the default grep POSIX pattern matching.

       -p, --no-dereference
              If  -R or -r is specified, do not follow symbolic links, even when symbolic links are specified on
              the command line.

       --pager[=COMMAND]
              When output is sent to the terminal, uses COMMAND to page through the output.  COMMAND defaults to
              environment variable PAGER when defined or `less'.  Enables --heading and --line-buffered.

       --pretty[=WHEN]
              When output is sent to a terminal, enables --color, --heading, -n, --sort, --tree and -T when  not
              explicitly disabled.  WHEN can be `never', `always', or `auto'.  The default is `auto'.

       -Q[=DELAY], --query[=DELAY]
              Query  mode:  start  a  TUI  to  perform interactive searches.  This mode requires an ANSI capable
              terminal.  An optional DELAY argument may be specified to reduce or increase the response time  to
              execute  searches  after the last key press, in increments of 100ms, where the default is 3 (300ms
              delay).  No whitespace may be given between -Q and its argument DELAY.  Initial  patterns  may  be
              specified with -e PATTERN, i.e. a PATTERN argument requires option -e.  Press F1 or CTRL-Z to view
              the help screen.  Press F2 or CTRL-Y to invoke a command to view or edit the file shown at the top
              of  the  screen.   The  command  can  be  specified with option --view, or defaults to environment
              variable PAGER when defined, or EDITOR.  Press Tab and Shift-Tab to navigate  directories  and  to
              select  a  file  to  search.  Press Enter to select lines to output.  Press ALT-l for option -l to
              list files, ALT-n for -n, etc.  Non-option commands include ALT-] to increase context and ALT-} to
              increase fuzzyness.  See also options --no-confirm, --delay, --split and --view.

       -q, --quiet, --silent
              Quiet mode: suppress all output.  Only search a file until a match has been found.

       -R, --dereference-recursive
              Recursively  read  all  files  under  each  directory,  following  symbolic  links  to  files  and
              directories, unlike -r.

       -r, --recursive
              Recursively  read all files under each directory, following symbolic links only if they are on the
              command line.  Note that when no FILE arguments are specified and input is read from  a  terminal,
              recursive searches are performed as if -r is specified.

       --replace=FORMAT
              Replace matching patterns in the output by FORMAT with `%' fields.  If -P is specified, FORMAT may
              include  `%1'  to `%9', `%[NUM]#' and `%[NAME]#' to output group captures.  A `%%' outputs `%' and
              `%~' outputs a newline.  See also option --format, `ugrep --help format' and `man  ugrep'  section
              FORMAT for details.

       -S, --dereference-files
              When  -r is specified, follow symbolic links to files, but not to directories.  The default is not
              to follow symbolic links.

       -s, --no-messages
              Silent mode: nonexistent and unreadable files are ignored and their error  messages  and  warnings
              are suppressed.

       --save-config[=FILE] [OPTIONS]
              Save  configuration  FILE  to  include OPTIONS.  Update FILE when first loaded with --config=FILE.
              The default FILE is `.ugrep', which is automatically loaded by the ug command.   When  FILE  is  a
              `-',  writes the configuration to standard output.  Only part of the OPTIONS are saved that do not
              cause searches to fail when combined with other options.  Additional options may be  specified  by
              editing  the  saved  configuration file.  A configuration file may be modified manually to specify
              one or more config[=FILE] to indirectly load the specified FILE, but recursive config  loading  is
              not allowed.

       --separator[=SEP]
              Use  SEP  as  field  separator  between file name, line number, column number, byte offset and the
              matched line.  The default is a colon (`:') and a bar (`|') for multi-line pattern matches.

       --split
              Split the -Q query TUI screen on startup.

       --sort[=KEY]
              Displays matching files in the order specified by KEY in  recursive  searches.   Normally  the  ug
              command  sorts  by name whereas the ugrep batch command displays matches in no particular order to
              improve performance.  The sort KEY can be `name' to sort by pathname (default), `best' to sort  by
              best match with option -Z (sort by best match requires two passes over files, which is expensive),
              `size'  to  sort  by  file  size,  `used'  to  sort by last access time, `changed' to sort by last
              modification time and `created' to sort by creation  time.   Sorting  is  reversed  with  `rname',
              `rbest',   `rsize',  `rused',  `rchanged',  or  `rcreated'.   Archive  contents  are  not  sorted.
              Subdirectories are sorted and displayed after matching files.  FILE arguments are searched in  the
              same order as specified.

       --stats
              Output  statistics on the number of files and directories searched and the inclusion and exclusion
              constraints applied.

       -T, --initial-tab
              Add a tab space to separate the file name, line number, column number and  byte  offset  with  the
              matched line.

       -t TYPES, --file-type=TYPES
              Search  only  files  associated  with TYPES, a comma-separated list of file types.  Each file type
              corresponds to a set of filename extensions passed to option -O and filenames passed to option -g.
              For capitalized file types, the search is expanded to include files with matching  file  signature
              magic bytes, as if passed to option -M.  When a type is preceded by a `!' or a `^', excludes files
              of  the  specified  type.   Specifying the initial part of a type name suffices when the choice is
              unambiguous.  This option may be repeated.  The possible file types  can  be  (-tlist  displays  a
              list): `actionscript', `ada', `asm', `asp', `aspx', `autoconf', `automake', `awk', `Awk', `basic',
              `batch',  `bison', `c', `c++', `clojure', `cpp', `csharp', `css', `csv', `dart', `Dart', `delphi',
              `elisp', `elixir', `erlang', `fortran', `gif', `Gif', `go', `groovy',  `gsp',  `haskell',  `html',
              `jade',  `java',  `jpeg',  `Jpeg',  `js', `json', `jsp', `julia', `kotlin', `less', `lex', `lisp',
              `lua', `m4', `make', `markdown', `matlab', `node', `Node', `objc',  `objc++',  `ocaml',  `parrot',
              `pascal',  `pdf', `Pdf', `perl', `Perl', `php', `Php', `png', `Png', `prolog', `python', `Python',
              `r', `rpm', `Rpm', `rst', `rtf',  `Rtf',  `ruby',  `Ruby',  `rust',  `scala',  `scheme',  `shell',
              `Shell',  `smalltalk',  `sql',  `svg',  `swift',  `tcl',  `tex',  `text',  `tiff',  `Tiff',  `tt',
              `typescript', `verilog', `vhdl', `vim', `xml', `Xml', `yacc', `yaml', `zig'.

       --tabs[=NUM]
              Set the tab size to NUM to expand tabs for option -k.  The value of NUM may be 1, 2, 4, or 8.  The
              default tab size is 8.

       --tag[=TAG[,END]]
              Disables colors to mark up matches with TAG.  END marks the end of a match if specified, otherwise
              TAG.  The default is `___'.

       --tree, -^
              Output directories with matching files in a tree-like format for  option  -c  or  --count,  -l  or
              --files-with-matches,  -L  or  --files-without-match.  This option is enabled by --pretty when the
              output is sent to a terminal.

       -U, --ascii, --binary
              Disables Unicode matching for ASCII and binary  matching.   PATTERN  matches  bytes,  not  Unicode
              characters.  For example, -U '\xa3' matches byte A3 (hex) instead of the Unicode code point U+00A3
              represented by the UTF-8 sequence C2 A3.  See also option --dotall.

       -u, --ungroup
              Do not group multiple pattern matches on the same matched line.  Output the matched line again for
              each additional pattern match.

       -V, --version
              Display version with linked libraries and exit.

       -v, --invert-match
              Selected lines are those not matching any of the specified patterns.

       --view[=COMMAND]
              Use COMMAND to view/edit a file in -Q query TUI by pressing CTRL-Y.

       -W, --with-hex
              Output  binary  matches  in hexadecimal, leaving text matches alone.  This option is equivalent to
              the --binary-files=with-hex option with --hexdump=2C.  To omit the  matching  line  from  the  hex
              output, combine option --hexdump with option -W.  See also option -U.

       -w, --word-regexp
              The  PATTERN  is  searched  for  as  a word, such that the matching text is preceded by a non-word
              character and is followed by a non-word character.   Word-like  characters  are  Unicode  letters,
              digits and connector punctuations such as underscore.

       --width[=NUM]
              Truncate  the output to NUM visible characters per line.  The width of the terminal window is used
              if NUM is not specified.  Note that double wide characters in  the  output  may  result  in  wider
              lines.

       -X, --hex
              Output  matches  in  hexadecimal.  This option is equivalent to the --binary-files=hex option with
              --hexdump=2C.  To omit the matching line from the hex  output  use  option  --hexdump.   See  also
              option -U.

       -x, --line-regexp
              Select  only those matches that exactly match the whole line, as if the patterns are surrounded by
              ^ and $.

       --xml  Output file matches in XML.  If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified, additional values are output.  See
              also options --format and -u.

       -Y, --empty
              Permits empty matches.  By default, empty matches are disabled, unless a pattern begins  with  `^'
              or  ends  with `$'.  With this option, empty-matching patterns such as x? and x*, match all input,
              not only lines containing the character `x'.

       -y, --any-line, --passthru
              Any line is output (passthru).  Non-matching lines are output as context  with  a  `-'  separator.
              See also options -A, -B and -C.

       -Z[best][+-~][MAX], --fuzzy[=[best][+-~][MAX]]
              Fuzzy  mode:  report  approximate  pattern  matches  within  MAX  errors.  The default is -Z1: one
              deletion, insertion or substitution is allowed.  If `+`, `-' and/or `~'  is  specified,  then  `+'
              allows  insertions,  `-' allows deletions and `~' allows substitutions.  For example, -Z+~3 allows
              up to three insertions or substitutions, but no deletions.  If `best' is specified, then only  the
              best  matching  lines are output with the lowest cost per file.  Option -Zbest requires two passes
              over a file and cannot be used with standard input or Boolean queries.  Option --sort=best  orders
              matching  files  by  best  match.   The  first  character of an approximate match always matches a
              character at the beginning of the pattern.  To fuzzy match the first character, replace it with  a
              `.'  or  `.?'.   Option  -U applies fuzzy matching to ASCII and bytes instead of Unicode text.  No
              whitespace may be given between -Z and its argument.

       -z, --decompress
              Search compressed files and archives.  Archives (.cpio, .pax, .tar) and compressed archives  (e.g.
              .zip, .7z, .taz, .tgz, .tpz, .tbz, .tbz2, .tb2, .tz2, .tlz, .txz, .tzst) are searched and matching
              pathnames  of  files in archives are output in braces.  When used with option --zmax=NUM, searches
              the contents of compressed files and archives stored within archives up to NUM levels.  If -g, -O,
              -M, or -t is specified, searches files stored in  archives  whose  filenames  match  globs,  match
              filename  extensions,  match  file  signature  magic  bytes,  or  match  file types, respectively.
              Supported compression formats: gzip (.gz), compress (.Z), zip, 7z,  bzip2  (requires  suffix  .bz,
              .bz2,  .bzip2, .tbz, .tbz2, .tb2, .tz2), lzma and xz (requires suffix .lzma, .tlz, .xz, .txz), lz4
              (requires suffix .lz4), zstd (requires suffix .zst, .zstd, .tzst), brotli (requires suffix .br).

       --zmax=NUM
              When used with option -z (--decompress), searches the contents of compressed  files  and  archives
              stored within archives by up to NUM expansion stages.  The default --zmax=1 only permits searching
              uncompressed  files  stored  in cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives; compressed files and archives
              are detected as binary files and are effectively ignored.  Specify --zmax=2 to  search  compressed
              files  and archives stored in cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives.  NUM may range from 1 to 99 for
              up to  99  decompression  and  de-archiving  steps.   Increasing  NUM  values  gradually  degrades
              performance.

       -0, --null
              Output a zero-byte (NUL) after the file name.  This option can be used with commands such as `find
              -print0' and `xargs -0' to process arbitrary file names.

EXIT STATUS

       The ugrep utility exits with one of the following values:

       0      One or more lines were selected.

       1      No lines were selected.

       >1     An error occurred.

       If  -q  or  --quiet  or  --silent  is  used and a line is selected, the exit status is 0 even if an error
       occurred.

CONFIGURATION

       The ug command is intended for context-dependent interactive searching and is  equivalent  to  the  ugrep
       --config  --pretty  --sort  command  to  load the default configuration file `.ugrep' when present in the
       working directory or in the home directory.

       A configuration file contains `NAME=VALUE' pairs per line, where `NAME` is the  name  of  a  long  option
       (without `--') and `=VALUE' is an argument, which is optional and may be omitted depending on the option.
       Empty lines and lines starting with a `#' are ignored.

       The  --config=FILE  option and its abbreviated form ---FILE load the specified configuration file located
       in the working directory or, when not found, located in the home directory.  An error  is  produced  when
       FILE is not found or cannot be read.

       Command  line options are parsed in the following order: the configuration file is loaded first, followed
       by the remaining options and arguments on the command line.

       The --save-config option saves a `.ugrep' configuration file to the working directory with  a  subset  of
       the  options  specified  on  the  command line.  The --save-config=FILE option saves the configuration to
       FILE.  The configuration is written to standard output when FILE is a `-'.

GLOBBING

       Globbing is used by options  -g,  --include,  --include-dir,  --include-from,  --exclude,  --exclude-dir,
       --exclude-from and --ignore-files to match pathnames and basenames in recursive searches.  Glob arguments
       for these options should be quoted to prevent shell globbing.

       Globbing  supports  gitignore  syntax  and  the corresponding matching rules, except that a glob normally
       matches files but not directories.  If a glob ends in a path separator `/', then it  matches  directories
       but  not files, as if --include-dir or --exclude-dir is specified.  When a glob contains a path separator
       `/', the full pathname is matched.  Otherwise the basename of  a  file  or  directory  is  matched.   For
       example, *.h matches foo.h and bar/foo.h.  bar/*.h matches bar/foo.h but not foo.h and not bar/bar/foo.h.
       Use a leading `/' to force /*.h to match foo.h but not bar/foo.h.

       When  a  glob starts with a `^' or a `!' as in -g^GLOB, the match is negated.  Likewise, a `!' (but not a
       `^') may be used with globs in the files specified --include-from, --exclude-from, and --ignore-files  to
       negate the glob match.  Empty lines or lines starting with a `#' are ignored.

       Glob Syntax and Conventions

       *      Matches anything except /.

       ?      Matches any one character except /.

       [abc-e]
              Matches one character a,b,c,d,e.

       [^abc-e]
              Matches one character not a,b,c,d,e,/.

       [!abc-e]
              Matches one character not a,b,c,d,e,/.

       /      When  used  at the start of a glob, matches if pathname has no /.  When used at the end of a glob,
              matches directories only.

       **/    Matches zero or more directories.

       /**    When used at the end of a glob, matches everything after the /.

       \?     Matches a ? or any other character specified after the backslash.

       Glob Matching Examples

       *      Matches a, b, x/a, x/y/b

       a      Matches a, x/a, x/y/a,       but not b, x/b, a/a/b

       /*     Matches a, b,                but not x/a, x/b, x/y/a

       /a     Matches a,                   but not x/a, x/y/a

       a?b    Matches axb, ayb,            but not a, b, ab, a/b

       a[xy]b Matches axb, ayb             but not a, b, azb

       a[a-z]b
              Matches aab, abb, acb, azb,  but not a, b, a3b, aAb, aZb

       a[^xy]b
              Matches aab, abb, acb, azb,  but not a, b, axb, ayb

       a[^a-z]b
              Matches a3b, aAb, aZb        but not a, b, aab, abb, acb, azb

       a/*/b  Matches a/x/b, a/y/b,        but not a/b, a/x/y/b

       **/a   Matches a, x/a, x/y/a,       but not b, x/b.

       a/**/b Matches a/b, a/x/b, a/x/y/b, but not x/a/b, a/b/x

       a/**   Matches a/x, a/y, a/x/y,     but not a, b/x

       a\?b   Matches a?b,                 but not a, b, ab, axb, a/b

       Note that exclude glob patterns take priority over include glob patterns when specified with options  -g,
       --exclude, --exclude-dir, --include and include-dir.

       Glob  patterns  specified  with prefix `!' in any of the files associated with --include-from, --exclude-
       from and --ignore-files will negate a previous glob match.  That  is,  any  matching  file  or  directory
       excluded  by  a  previous glob pattern specified in the files associated with --exclude-from or --ignore-
       file will become included again.  Likewise, any matching file or directory included by  a  previous  glob
       pattern specified in the files associated with --include-from will become excluded again.

ENVIRONMENT

       GREP_PATH
              May be used to specify a file path to pattern files.  The file path is used by option -f to open a
              pattern file, when the pattern file does not exist.

       GREP_COLOR
              May  be used to specify ANSI SGR parameters to highlight matches when option --color is used, e.g.
              1;35;40 shows pattern matches in bold magenta text on a black background.  Deprecated in favor  of
              GREP_COLORS, but still supported.

       GREP_COLORS
              May  be  used to specify ANSI SGR parameters to highlight matches and other attributes when option
              --color is used.  Its value is a colon-separated list of ANSI  SGR  parameters  that  defaults  to
              cx=33:mt=1;31:fn=1;35:ln=1;32:cn=1;32:bn=1;32:se=36  with  additional  parameters  for  TUI colors
              :qp=1;32:qe=1;37;41:qm=1;32:ql=36:qb=1;35.  The mt=, ms=, and mc= capabilities of GREP_COLORS take
              priority over GREP_COLOR.  Option --colors takes priority over GREP_COLORS.

GREP_COLORS

       Colors are specified as string of colon-separated ANSI SGR parameters of the form `what=substring', where
       `substring' is a semicolon-separated list of ANSI SGR codes or `k' (black), `r' (red), `g'  (green),  `y'
       (yellow), `b' (blue), `m' (magenta), `c' (cyan), `w' (white).  Upper case specifies background colors.  A
       `+'  qualifies  a  color as bright.  A foreground and a background color may be combined with one or more
       font properties `n' (normal), `f' (faint), `h' (highlight), `i' (invert),  `u'  (underline).   Substrings
       may be specified for:

       sl=    selected lines.

       cx=    context lines.

       rv     swaps the sl= and cx= capabilities when -v is specified.

       mt=    matching text in any matching line.

       ms=    matching text in a selected line.  The substring mt= by default.

       mc=    matching text in a context line.  The substring mt= by default.

       fn=    filenames.

       ln=    line numbers.

       cn=    column numbers.

       bn=    byte offsets.

       se=    separators.

       rv     a Boolean parameter, switches sl= and cx= with option -v.

       hl     a Boolean parameter, enables filename hyperlinks (\33]8;;link).

       ne     a Boolean parameter, disables ``erase in line'' \33[K.

       qp=    TUI prompt.

       qe=    TUI errors.

       qr=    TUI regex.

       qm=    TUI regex meta characters.

       ql=    TUI regex lists and literals.

       qb=    TUI regex braces.

FORMAT

       Option  --format=FORMAT specifies an output format for file matches.  Fields may be used in FORMAT, which
       expand into the following values:

       %[TEXT]F
              if option -H is used: TEXT, the file pathname and separator.

       %f     the file pathname.

       %a     the file basename without directory path.

       %p     the directory path to the file.

       %z     the file pathname in a (compressed) archive.

       %[TEXT]H
              if option -H is used: TEXT, the quoted pathname and separator, \" and \\ replace " and \.

       %h     the quoted file pathname, \" and \\ replace " and \.

       %[TEXT]N
              if option -n is used: TEXT, the line number and separator.

       %n     the line number of the match.

       %[TEXT]K
              if option -k is used: TEXT, the column number and separator.

       %k     the column number of the match.

       %[TEXT]B
              if option -b is used: TEXT, the byte offset and separator.

       %b     the byte offset of the match.

       %[TEXT]T
              if option -T is used: TEXT and a tab character.

       %t     a tab character.

       %[SEP]$
              set field separator to SEP for the rest of the format fields.

       %[TEXT]<
              if the first match: TEXT.

       %[TEXT]>
              if not the first match: TEXT.

       %,     if not the first match: a comma, same as %[,]>.

       %:     if not the first match: a colon, same as %[:]>.

       %;     if not the first match: a semicolon, same as %[;]>.

       %|     if not the first match: a vertical bar, same as %[|]>.

       %[TEXT]S
              if not the first match: TEXT and separator, see also %[SEP]$.

       %s     the separator, see also %[TEXT]S and %[SEP]$.

       %~     a newline character.

       %M     the number of matching lines

       %m     the number of matches

       %O     the matching line is output as a raw string of bytes.

       %o     the match is output as a raw string of bytes.

       %Q     the matching line as a quoted string, \" and \\ replace " and \.

       %q     the match as a quoted string, \" and \\ replace " and \.

       %C     the matching line formatted as a quoted C/C++ string.

       %c     the match formatted as a quoted C/C++ string.

       %J     the matching line formatted as a quoted JSON string.

       %j     the match formatted as a quoted JSON string.

       %V     the matching line formatted as a quoted CSV string.

       %v     the match formatted as a quoted CSV string.

       %X     the matching line formatted as XML character data.

       %x     the match formatted as XML character data.

       %w     the width of the match, counting wide characters.

       %d     the size of the match, counting bytes.

       %e     the ending byte offset of the match.

       %Z     the edit distance cost of an approximate match with option -Z

       %u     select unique lines only, unless option -u is used.

       %1     the first regex group capture of the match, and so on up to group  %9,  same  as  %[1]#;  requires
              option -P.

       %[NUM]#
              the regex group capture NUM; requires option -P.

       %[NUM]b
              the  byte  offset  of the group capture NUM; requires option -P.  Use e for the ending byte offset
              and d for the byte length.

       %[NUM1|NUM2|...]#
              the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P.

       %[NUM1|NUM2|...]b
              the byte offset of the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P.  Use  e  for  the
              ending byte offset and d for the byte length.

       %[NAME]#
              the NAMEd group capture; requires option -P and capturing pattern `(?<NAME>PATTERN)', see also %G.

       %[NAME]b
              the   byte  offset  of  the  NAMEd  group  capture;  requires  option  -P  and  capturing  pattern
              `(?<NAME>PATTERN)'.  Use e for the ending byte offset and d for the byte length.

       %[NAME1|NAME2|...]#
              the  first  NAMEd  group  capture  that  matched;  requires  option  -P  and   capturing   pattern
              `(?<NAME>PATTERN)', see also %G.

       %[NAME1|NAME2|...]b
              the  byte  offset  of the first NAMEd group capture that matched; requires option -P and capturing
              pattern `(?<NAME>PATTERN)'.  Use e for the ending byte offset and d for the byte length.

       %G     list of group capture indices/names that matched; requires option -P.

       %[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]G
              list of TEXT indexed by group capture indices that matched; requires option -P.

       %g     the group capture index/name matched or 1; requires option -P.

       %[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]g
              the first TEXT indexed by the first group capture index that matched; requires option -P.

       %%     the percentage sign.

       Formatted output is written without a terminating newline, unless %~ or `\n' is explicitly  specified  in
       the format string.

       The  [TEXT] part of a field is optional and may be omitted.  When present, the argument must be placed in
       [] brackets, for example %[,]F to output a comma, the pathname, and a separator.

       %[SEP]$ and %u are switches and do not send anything to the output.

       The separator used by the %F, %H, %N, %K, %B, %S and %G fields may be changed by preceding the  field  by
       %[SEP]$.   When  [SEP]  is  not  provided,  this  reverts  the  separator to the default separator or the
       separator specified with --separator.

       Formatted output is written for each matching pattern, which means that a line  may  be  output  multiple
       times when patterns match more than once on the same line.  If field %u is specified anywhere in a format
       string,  matching  lines are output only once, unless option -u, --ungroup is specified or when more than
       one line of input matched the search pattern.

       Additional formatting options:

       --format-begin=FORMAT
              the FORMAT when beginning the search.

       --format-open=FORMAT
              the FORMAT when opening a file and a match was found.

       --format-close=FORMAT
              the FORMAT when closing a file and a match was found.

       --format-end=FORMAT
              the FORMAT when ending the search.

       The context options -A, -B, -C, -y, and display options --break, --heading, --color, -T, and --null  have
       no effect on formatted output.

EXAMPLES

       Display lines containing the word `patricia' in `myfile.txt':

              $ ugrep -w patricia myfile.txt

       Display lines containing the word `patricia', ignoring case:

              $ ugrep -wi patricia myfile.txt

       Display  lines  approximately  matching  the word `patricia', ignoring case and allowing up to 2 spelling
       errors using fuzzy search:

              $ ugrep -Z2 -wi patricia myfile.txt

       Count the number of lines containing `patricia', ignoring case:

              $ ugrep -cwi patricia myfile.txt

       Count the number of words `patricia', ignoring case:

              $ ugrep -cowi patricia myfile.txt

       List lines with `amount' and a decimal, ignoring case (space is AND):

              $ ugrep -i -% 'amount +(.+)?' myfile.txt

       Alternative query:

              $ ugrep -wi -e amount --and '+(.+)?' myfile.txt

       List all Unicode words in a file:

              $ ugrep -o '\w+' myfile.txt

       List the laughing face emojis (Unicode code points U+1F600 to U+1F60F):

              $ ugrep -o '[\x{1F600}-\x{1F60F}]' myfile.txt

       Check if a file contains any non-ASCII (i.e. Unicode) characters:

              $ ugrep -q '[^[:ascii:]]' myfile.txt && echo "contains Unicode"

       Display the line and column number of `FIXME' in C++ files using  recursive  search,  with  one  line  of
       context before and after a matched line:

              $ ugrep -C1 -R -n -k -tc++ FIXME

       Display  the  line  and column number of `FIXME' in long Javascript files using recursive search, showing
       only matches with up to 10 characters of context before and after:

              $ ugrep -o -C20 -R -n -k -tjs FIXME

       Find blocks of text between lines matching BEGIN and END by using a lazy quantifier `*?'  to  match  only
       what is necessary and pattern `\n' to match newlines:

              $ ugrep -n 'BEGIN.*\n(.*\n)*?.*END' myfile.txt

       Likewise, list the C/C++ comments in a file and line numbers:

              $ ugrep -n -e '//.*' -e '/\*(.*\n)*?.*\*+\/' myfile.cpp

       The same, but using predefined pattern c++/comments:

              $ ugrep -n -f c++/comments myfile.cpp

       List the lines that need fixing in a C/C++ source file by looking for the word `FIXME' while skipping any
       `FIXME' in quoted strings:

              $ ugrep -e FIXME -N '"(\\.|\\\r?\n|[^\\\n"])*"' myfile.cpp

       The same, but using predefined pattern cpp/zap_strings:

              $ ugrep -e FIXME -f cpp/zap_strings myfile.cpp

       Find lines with `FIXME' or `TODO', showing line numbers:

              $ ugrep -n -e FIXME -e TODO myfile.cpp

       Find lines with `FIXME' that also contain `urgent':

              $ ugrep -n -e FIXME --and urgent myfile.cpp

       The same, but with a Boolean query pattern (a space is AND):

              $ ugrep -n -% 'FIXME urgent' myfile.cpp

       Find lines with `FIXME' that do not also contain `later':

              $ ugrep -n -e FIXME --andnot later myfile.cpp

       The same, but with a Boolean query pattern (a space is AND, - is NOT):

              $ ugrep -n -% 'FIXME -later' myfile.cpp

       Output a list of line numbers of lines with `FIXME' but not `later':

              $ ugrep -e FIXME --andnot later --format='%,%n' myfile.cpp

       Recursively  list  all files with both `FIXME' and `LICENSE' anywhere in the file, not necessarily on the
       same line:

              $ ugrep -l -%% 'FIXME LICENSE'

       Find lines with `FIXME' in the C/C++ files stored in a tarball:

              $ ugrep -z -tc++ -n FIXME project.tgz

       Recursively find lines with `FIXME' in C/C++ files, but do not search any `bak' and `old' directories:

              $ ugrep -n FIXME -tc++ -g^bak/,^old/

       Recursively search for the word `copyright' in cpio, jar, pax, tar,  zip,  7z  archives,  compressed  and
       regular files, and in PDFs using a PDF filter:

              $ ugrep -z -w --filter='pdf:pdftotext % -' copyright

       Match  the  binary  pattern  `A3hhhhA3' (hex) in a binary file without Unicode pattern matching -U (which
       would otherwise match `\xaf' as a Unicode character U+00A3 with UTF-8 byte sequence C2  A3)  and  display
       the results in hex with --hexdump with C1 to output one hex line before and after each match:

              $ ugrep -U --hexdump=C1 '\xa3[\x00-\xff]{2}\xa3' a.out

       Hexdump an entire file using a pager for viewing:

              $ ugrep -X --pager '' a.out

       List all files that are not ignored by one or more `.gitignore':

              $ ugrep -l '' --ignore-files

       List all files containing a RPM signature, located in the `rpm' directory and recursively below up to two
       levels deeper (3 levels total):

              $ ugrep -3 -l -tRpm '' rpm/

       Monitor the system log for bug reports and ungroup multiple matches on a line:

              $ tail -f /var/log/system.log | ugrep -u -i -w bug

       Interactive fuzzy search with Boolean search queries:

              $ ugrep -Q -l -% -Z3 --sort=best

       Display all words in a MacRoman-encoded file that has CR newlines:

              $ ugrep --encoding=MACROMAN '\w+' mac.txt

       Display options related to "fuzzy" searching:

              $ ugrep --help fuzzy

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2021,2024 Robert A. van Engelen <engelen@acm.org>

       ugrep  is  released  under  the BSD-3 license.  All parts of the software have reasonable copyright terms
       permitting free redistribution.  This includes the ability to reuse all or  parts  of  the  ugrep  source
       tree.

SEE ALSO

       ugrep-indexer(1), grep(1), zgrep(1).

BUGS

       Report bugs at: <https://github.com/Genivia/ugrep/issues>

ugrep 6.4.1                                      August 08, 2024                                        UGREP(1)