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NAME

       whichman  -  show  the  location  of  a man page using a fault tolerant
       approximate matching algorithm

SYNOPSIS

       whichman [-#ehIp][-t#] man-page-name

DESCRIPTION

       whichman is a "which" alike search command  for  man  pages.   whichman
       searches  the  MANPATH  environment  variable.  If this variable is not
       defined,   then   it    uses    /usr/share/man:/usr/man:/usr/X11R6/man:
       /usr/local/share/man:/usr/local/man by default.

       Unlike  "which" this program does not stop on the first match. The name
       should probably have been something like whereman  as  this  is  not  a
       "which" at all.  whichman shows all man-pages that match and allows you
       to identify the different sections to which the pages belong.

       whichman can handle international  manpage  path  names  for  different
       languages.    Man  pages  in  different  languages  may  be  stored  in
       .../man/<country_code>/man[1-9]/...

       By default, whichman does fault tolerant approximate  string  matching.
       With  a  default tolerance level of: (strlen(searchpattern) - number of
       wildcards)/6 + 1

OPTIONS

       -h     Prints a little help/usage information.

       -I     Do case sensitive search (default is case in-sensitive)

       -e     Use exact matching when searching for a given man-page  and  the
              wildcards * and ? are disabled.

       -p     print  the actual tolerance level in front of the man page name.

       -# or -t#
              Set the fault tolerance level to #.  The fault  tolerance  level
              is  a  integer  #  in the range 0-255.  It specifies the maximum
              number of errors permitted in finding the approximate match.   A
              tolerance_level  of  zero allows exact matches only but does NOT
              disable the wildcards * and ?.

       The search key may contain the wildcards * and ? (but see -e option):

       ’*’    any arbitrary number of character

       ’?’    one character

       The last argument to whichman is not parsed for options as the  program
       needs  at least one man-page-name argument. This means that whichman -x
       will not complain about a wrong option  but  search  for  the  man-page
       named -x.

EXAMPLE

       whichman print

       This will e.g. find the man-pages:
       /usr/share/man/man1/printf.1.gz
       /usr/share/man/man3/printf.3.gz
       /usr/share/man/man3/rint.3.gz

BUGS

       The  wildcards  ’?’   and  ’*’  can  not  be  escaped. These characters
       function always as wildcards. This is however not a big  problem  since
       there is hardly any man-page that has these characters in its name.

AUTHOR

       Guido Socher (guido@linuxfocus.org)

SEE ALSO

       ftff(1), man(1)