# lines This command takes a string from a pipeline as input, and returns a table where each line of the input string is a row in the table. Empty lines are ignored. This command is capable of feeding other commands, such as `nth`, with its output. ## Usage ```shell > [input-command] | lines ``` ## Examples Basic usage: ```shell > printf "Hello\nWorld!\nLove, nushell." | lines ━━━┯━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ # │ value ───┼──────────────── 0 │ Hello 1 │ World! 2 │ Love, nushell. ━━━┷━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ``` One useful application is piping the contents of file into `lines`. This example extracts a certain line from a given file. ```shell > cat lines.md | lines | nth 6 ## Examples ``` Similarly to this example, `lines` can be used to extract certain portions of or apply transformations to data returned by any program which returns a string.