![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjPhblFp8iImCCIExVdGmC_yGRFa0I6d6ASZwFEw5LzSrF21UrPw-XKPn_vxGe2MFFjbDlDyMgxOaajYsiT0MbUjcukLyJEbQGxYqAcafK-NEhZUEnCOgaY_dHDCF5ZUNt89-OrqwpG2xZTi8wKnLaq1g-x8Q_5otBpg352SJ9OBImgbQbs3kXOGwXz7-A/s200/cl.png)
The idea for this post comes from one I found upon the Seiden Group's website. I need to thank Alan Seiden for giving me permission to take the contents of his post and tweak it in a way I would use it.
The post gave an example of using QShell to grep, search files for a string of characters, to search source members in source files. As it is possible to use wild cards in a grep statement I can search many libraries and/or many different source files for the string I desire. For example if I want to search every RPG source file for the string "free". I would start QShell by using the following command:
qsh |