## Name strings - find printable strings in files ## Synopsis ```**sh $ strings [--bytes NUMBER] [--print-file-name] [-o] [--radix FORMAT] [PATHS...] ``` ## Description `strings` looks for printable strings in each file specified in `PATHS` and writes them to standard output. If `PATHS` is not specified, input is read from standard input. ## Options * `-n NUMBER`, `--bytes NUMBER`: Specify the minimum string length (4 is default). * `-f`, `--print-file-name`: Print the name of the file before each string. * `-o`: Equivalent to specifying `-t o`. * `-t FORMAT`, `--radix FORMAT`: Write each string preceded by its byte offset from the start of the file in the specified `FORMAT`, where `FORMAT` matches one of the following: `d` (decimal), `o` (octal), or `x` (hexidecimal). ## Examples Display the printable strings in /bin/strings with a minimum length of 8 characters: ```sh $ strings -n 8 /bin/strings ``` Display the printable strings in a binary file, preceded by their byte offset in hexadecimal format: ```sh $ strings -t x ~/Videos/test.webm ``` Display the printable strings in all .txt files in the current directory, preceded by their pathname: ```sh $ strings -f *.txt ```