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Home/ Questions/Q 1087067
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T22:53:31+00:00 2026-05-16T22:53:31+00:00

Sometimes when I type a command in bash, I mistakenly type in the \

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Sometimes when I type a command in bash, I mistakenly type in the \ character at the end, as it is close to the Enter key.
Whenever I do this, I get a prompt on the next line, like this:

>_

The same output is produced when the ` character is used.

What exactly does this \ do to the command?

Are there other characters (besides \ and `) that give a similar output?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T22:53:31+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 10:53 pm

    the \ character allows you to break your command into multiple lines :

    $ grep "hello" /tmp/file
    

    is equivalent to :

    $ grep "hello" \
    > /tmp/file
    

    the ' and " character allows you to define multiline strings, and the ` is a way to use the output of a command as an argument to another. $(command) does the same thing.

    whenever you see

    >
    

    it means that the command syntax is not complete. Some shell constructs also needs to be terminated, like while, for, if …

    The displayed > can be configured with the PS2 environnement variable.

    as requested, here is an example using ` :
    suppose i have a list of files into filelist.txt:

    $ cat filelist.txt
    a.c
    a.h
    Makefile
    test.cfg
    [...]
    

    i want to know the number of lines in each of those files. the command would be wc -l a.c a.h Makefile [...]. to use the output of the cat filelist.txt as arguments to wc -l, i can use :

    $ wc -l `
    > cat filelist.txt
    > `
    
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