I finally got fed up when wanting to read about bash's read and it's -s option with man bash. I found the right spot eventually (around line 4500), but it was a frustrating as usual, since both /read and even /\s-s\s searches have way too many matches.
So, the question is: How can I read long man pages efficiently, or get same information in other ways, locally? As a specific example, how to reach the relevant documentation after seeing read -s pwd in a shell script? A good answer could be a shell script snippet, or hint about some tool and how it is used, or something else entirely, as long as it helps in finding the right spot to read.
Note: I'm not tagging with bash because I want the question to be about man page reading in general, even though that quite possibly is the most commonly encountered humongous man page.
manpage I use a little script i leave on my upper panel. http://www.yuugian.com/demo/gkman.txt Share and enjoy – Yuugian Oct 15 '13 at 13:01bashitself: just like you, I too mostly need theSHELL BUILTINSpart of the manual, which is at about line 3500. So knowing this, the next time I would just sayman bashand then go down 66 percent, by typing66%, then a few times PgDn and I'm there. Though I chose 66 because it can be memorized as "Route 66", it is actually a little more than that, albeit not so easy to memorize unless it is the beginning of your phone #, etc. :) At least the "Route 66" is universal and known worldwide. – syntaxerror Dec 14 '14 at 22:45