ls flag that shows files in MB in OSX Terminal

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the ls -l --block-size=M flag does not seem to work in the OSX terminal, which is what I typically use in a linux terminal to show file size in MB.



Does anyone know of a OSX variation for ls that shows files in MB?










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  • What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
    – multithr3at3d
    Dec 1 at 1:55











  • Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:01










  • M for megabyte, etc.,
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05










  • @Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:24














up vote
0
down vote

favorite












the ls -l --block-size=M flag does not seem to work in the OSX terminal, which is what I typically use in a linux terminal to show file size in MB.



Does anyone know of a OSX variation for ls that shows files in MB?










share|improve this question





















  • What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
    – multithr3at3d
    Dec 1 at 1:55











  • Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:01










  • M for megabyte, etc.,
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05










  • @Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:24












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











the ls -l --block-size=M flag does not seem to work in the OSX terminal, which is what I typically use in a linux terminal to show file size in MB.



Does anyone know of a OSX variation for ls that shows files in MB?










share|improve this question













the ls -l --block-size=M flag does not seem to work in the OSX terminal, which is what I typically use in a linux terminal to show file size in MB.



Does anyone know of a OSX variation for ls that shows files in MB?







osx ls






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 1 at 1:46









Iamanon

6




6











  • What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
    – multithr3at3d
    Dec 1 at 1:55











  • Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:01










  • M for megabyte, etc.,
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05










  • @Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:24
















  • What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
    – multithr3at3d
    Dec 1 at 1:55











  • Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:01










  • M for megabyte, etc.,
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05






  • 3




    Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
    – Thomas Dickey
    Dec 1 at 2:05










  • @Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
    – Iamanon
    Dec 1 at 2:24















What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
– multithr3at3d
Dec 1 at 1:55





What does man ls say? You can usually do -h for "human readable" values if that is sufficient.
– multithr3at3d
Dec 1 at 1:55













Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
– Iamanon
Dec 1 at 2:01




Sorry I'm noob, under -h, it says -h When used with the -l option, use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the number of digits to three or less using base 2 for sizes. What does it mean by unit suffixes?
– Iamanon
Dec 1 at 2:01












M for megabyte, etc.,
– Thomas Dickey
Dec 1 at 2:05




M for megabyte, etc.,
– Thomas Dickey
Dec 1 at 2:05




3




3




Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
– Thomas Dickey
Dec 1 at 2:05




Possible duplicate of “human readable” sizes with ls -sh on FreeBSD
– Thomas Dickey
Dec 1 at 2:05












@Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
– Iamanon
Dec 1 at 2:24




@Thomas Dicket. I mean how is the prefixes actually incorporated in the command ls -lh
– Iamanon
Dec 1 at 2:24















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