reference:
-O file
--output-document=file
The documents will not be written to the appropriate files, but all will be concatenated together and
written to file. If - is used as file, documents will be printed to standard output, disabling link
conversion. (Use ./- to print to a file literally named -.)
Use of -O is not intended to mean simply "use the name file instead of the one in the URL;" rather,
it is analogous to shell redirection: wget -O file http://foo is intended to work like wget -O -
http://foo > file; file will be truncated immediately, and all downloaded content will be written
there.
For this reason, -N (for timestamp-checking) is not supported in combination with -O: since file is
always newly created, it will always have a very new timestamp. A warning will be issued if this
combination is used.
Similarly, using -r or -p with -O may not work as you expect: Wget won't just download the first file
to file and then download the rest to their normal names: all downloaded content will be placed in
file. This was disabled in version 1.11, but has been reinstated (with a warning) in 1.11.2, as there
are some cases where this behavior can actually have some use.
Note that a combination with -k is only permitted when downloading a single document, as in that case
it will just convert all relative URIs to external ones; -k makes no sense for multiple URIs when
they're all being downloaded to a single file; -k can be used only when the output is a regular file.
Now, whenever a cheatsheet is to be edited, if that cheatsheet does not
exist on the `DEFAULT_SHEET_PATH`, it is first copied there before being
opened for editing. This prevents system-wide cheatsheets from being
edited when using `cheat` as `root`.
- Solves issue whereby global cheatsheets fail to save after editing
- `cheat` no longer asks a user if a global cheatsheet should be copied
locally before editing, and instead just silently does so.