 Okay, we use cut, or I use cut all the time in my tutorials. Here's an example that I've played with in a previous tutorial. I'm going to cat out a file here called file.txt. We've got a few lines here. You can see some of them have the pipe symbol. And I can divide that line up using cut. So I can say cut with a delimiter of pipe. So I'm giving it a character here. It can be any single character. And I can say field two. Oh, and then give it the file name, file.txt. When I do that, any line that has the pipe symbol on it will now only display the second column. So you can have multiple pipes here. And giving it the field here, which is basically the columns that are divided by the pipe symbol, we can tell it to look at the second column. But what happens if you don't give cut a delimiter to use, like I say this? Well, there it seems to display the whole file unedited. And that's because it doesn't have the delimiter that cut is looking for, so it's just displaying the lines as is. What does cut use if you don't tell it a delimiter? What it actually uses is a tab character. So if you have a file that's separated by tabs, you can use cut without giving any delimiters, and it will divide it up by tabs. So here's an example. I'm going to cat out a file called file2.txt. And we got some tabs here. We got a tab there, a tab there, a tab there. It doesn't really look like it, but there's a tab there, tab there, tab there, a tab there. Everyone, for some reason, put a tab instead of doing it as one word. So if I was to cut field2 and give it that file, file2.txt, without any delimiters, it's going to show us everything in the second column dividing things up by tabs. So now you know what cut uses by default if you don't give it a delimiter. And you also know if you needed to divide something up by tabs, how to do it. I hope you found this tutorial useful. I hope you visit my website, which is filmsbychris.com. That's Chris of the K. There's a link in the description, and I hope that you have a great day.