There's an interesting question about grep posted on StackOverflow.com: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45717127
The user was confused why "-i" didn't apply to the NAMES of the files on the command line. Obviously this is a misunderstanding of the separation of duties between the shell and the commands (shell expands wildcards, not the command). The top ranked answer for the question gently explained the difference. That said, I do take pity on the person, who may have been an early beginner or possibly not a native English speaker. The man page says: *-i*, *--ignore-case* Ignore case distinctions in both the PATTERN and the input files. Taking off my developer hat and putting on my writer/author hat, I have to agree that the man page could be phrased better. I think the person got caught up by seeing the word "files" instead of "contents". (I could also make the case that the fact that stdin isn't really a file means the sentence is inaccurate.) My suggestion is to change the description to be: Ignore case distinctions in both the PATTERN and the contents being searched. even better would be to break it into multiple sentences. This would make it perfectly clear: Ignore case during the search. Case is ignored in both the input contents PATTERN and the contents being searched. Tom -- Email: t...@whatexit.org Work: tlimonce...@stackoverflow.com Blog: http://EverythingSysadmin.com/