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-o in Linux terminal (Dash o); What does it mean?

I'm new to Linux Terminal and a lot of commands use the -o in it.

For example to compile a NASM program you say

gcc prgram1.o -o prgram1

I can guess that it has something to do with output but can anyone provide me with a proper definition and intuition for when it is used?

P.S. I did a lot of Googling, found a lot of pages with command references for Linux terminal but nothing that covered the simple -o.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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in most cases -o will stand for output but it's not a defined standard it can potentially mean anything the developer wanted it to mean, the only way someone can know which commands is to use a command line option of --help, -h, or something -? to display a simple list of commands, again because the developer of the program chooses the possible input arguments and there meaning this might differ from program to program.

The safest way to know is typically run

man gcc

replacing the second part with the program name you want.

man <program name>

This lists a full guide for the program with a lot more detail and is usually well formated to read on a terminal. just press Q when your finished reading it.


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