I wrote: > How does > nano +100 /etc/services > look to you? (^X means ctrl-X) pressed “Send”, and realised you wanted to open at a regexp, not a fixed line. That sounds like a job for shell scripting. If the file isn’t massive, try something like: nano +$(grep -n "message submission" /etc/services|head -n1| cut -d: -f1) /etc/services That’s grep -n pattern $FILENAME to find the pattern, prefixed with the line number. Pipe it through head -n1 to get the first line with it on, and then through cut -d: -f1 to get everything before the colon (which will be the line number you want). Put all of that in `` or in $( ) , which will mean the shell will interpret the contents of `` or $( ) and put the result (in this case the line number) there instead. That should work for any editor which understands the +line-no notation, which I think is most of them. Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail: james@ | “The letters are Elvish, of an ancient mode, but the aprilcottage.co.uk | language is that of Microsoft, which I will not utter | here. But this in the Common Tongue is what is said: By | this or any other name, You are well and truly...” -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines