Pwd

pwd
Original author(s)AT&T Bell Laboratories
Developer(s)Various open-source and commercial developers
Initial releaseJune 1974; 50 years ago (1974-06)
Written inC
Operating systemMultics, Unix, Unix-like, V, Plan 9, Inferno, SpartaDOS X, PANOS, Windows CE, KolibriOS
PlatformCross-platform
TypeCommand
Licensecoreutils: GPLv3+
Plan 9: MIT License

In Unix-like and some other operating systems, the pwd command (print working directory)[1][2][3] writes the full pathname of the current working directory to the standard output.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

  1. ^ "pwd(1) [minix man page]". www.unix.com.
  2. ^ "pwd - print name of current/working directory - man page". www.mankier.com.
  3. ^ "GNU Coreutils". www.gnu.org.
  4. ^ Unix Time-Sharing System: Unix Programmer's Manual (PDF). Vol. 1 (7th ed.). Bell labs. January 1979. p. 142. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-05-20.
  5. ^ "pwd(1) [plan9 man page]". www.unix.com.
  6. ^ "pwd". pubs.opengroup.org.
  7. ^ "pwd(1) [osf1 man page]". www.unix.com.
  8. ^ "Apple OS X MAN page".
  9. ^ "pwd(1) - OpenBSD manual pages". man.openbsd.org.
  10. ^ "pwd(1) [opensolaris man page]". www.unix.com.