Hi, If one runs `head --lines=-0 somefile', he'll sometimes get no output instead of full file contents as expected after reading the manual: -n, --lines=[-]K print the first K lines instead of the first 10; with the lead‐ ing `-', print all but the last K lines of each file It depends on whether the file has a trailing newline. For example: $ printf '1\n2\n3' > test1 $ printf '4\n5\n' > test2 $ head -n -0 test* ==> test1 <== ==> test2 <== 4 5 $ tail -n +0 test* # Just for comparison ==> test1 <== 1 2 3 ==> test2 <== 4 5 $ I'm using Debian GNU/Linux 7 wheezy and coreutils-8.13; I've also tested coreutils-8.22, and it has the same issue. A proposed patch fixing the bug is attached. It makes head behave exactly like `tail -n +0' on same files. -- Алексей Шилин