nm
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nm
Summary
nm is a standard UNIX utility or command[1]. nm draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (standard_unix_utility_or_command category, ranking #45 of 124).[2]
Key Facts
- nm's instance of is recorded as standard UNIX utility or command[3].
- nm's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/033jzv[4].
- nm's described at URL is recorded as http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/nm.html[5].
- nm's uses is recorded as shared library[6].
- nm's uses is recorded as static library[7].
- nm's uses is recorded as object file[8].
- nm's uses is recorded as executable[9].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as LANG[10].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as LC_ALL[11].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as LC_COLLATE[12].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as LC_CTYPE[13].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as LC_MESSAGES[14].
- nm's reads environment variable is recorded as NLSPATH[15].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as A[16].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as e[17].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as f[18].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as g[19].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as o[20].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as P[21].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as t[22].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as u[23].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as v[24].
- nm's has command line option is recorded as x[25].
Why It Matters
nm draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (standard_unix_utility_or_command category, ranking #45 of 124).[2] nm has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26]