The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
input/output redirection
I/O redirection
    In Unix, to send ouput from a process
   to different file or device or to another process via a
   pipe, or to have a process read its input from a different
   file, device or pipe.  Some other operating systems have
   similar facilities.
   To redirect input to come from a file instead of the keyboard,
   use "<":
   	myprog < myfile
   Similarly to redirect output to a file instead of the screen:
   	ls > filelist
   A pipe redirects the output of one process directly into the
   input of another
   	who | wc -l
   A common misuse by beginners is
   	cat myfile | myprog
   Which is more or less equivalent to "myprog < myfile" except
   that it introduces an extra unnecessary cat process and buffer
   space for the pipe.  Even the "<" is unnecessary with many
   standard Unix commands since they accept input file names as
   command line arguments anyway.
   Unix's concept of standard input/output and I/O redirection
   make it easy to combine simple processes in powerful ways and
   to use the same commands for different purposes.
   (1998-04-24)