\section psub psub - perform process substitution \subsection psub-synopsis Synopsis \fish{synopsis} COMMAND1 ( COMMAND2 | psub [-f] [-s SUFFIX]) \endfish \subsection psub-description Description Posix shells feature a syntax that is a mix between command substitution and piping, called process substitution. It is used to send the output of a command into the calling command, much like command substitution, but with the difference that the output is not sent through commandline arguments but through a named pipe, with the filename of the named pipe sent as an argument to the calling program. `psub` combined with a regular command substitution provides the same functionality. If the `-f` or `--file` switch is given to `psub`, `psub` will use a regular file instead of a named pipe to communicate with the calling process. This will cause `psub` to be significantly slower when large amounts of data are involved, but has the advantage that the reading process can seek in the stream. If the `-s` or `---suffix` switch is given, `psub` will append SUFFIX to the filename. \subsection psub-example Example \fish diff (sort a.txt | psub) (sort b.txt | psub) # shows the difference between the sorted versions of files `a.txt` and `b.txt`. source-highlight -f esc (cpp main.c | psub -s .c) # highlights `main.c` after preprocessing as a C source. \endfish