# Rake Only Lists Tasks With Descriptions Rake describes the `-T` flag as > Display the tasks (matching optional PATTERN) with descriptions, then exit. And `rake -T` does just exactly that. It lists all the tasks with descriptions. Any rake task that you define without a `desc` will not be included. Consider the following rake task definitions ```ruby desc 'foobar does this and that' task :foobar do puts 'this and that' end task :foobaz do puts 'not so much' end ``` This is what I get when listing the rake tasks filtered by _foo_ ```bash $ rake -T foo rake foobar # foobar does this and that ``` The `foobar` task (which has a description) is listed, but `foobaz` is not. A hack of sorts to get around this is to use the `-P` flag which will end up listing all tasks even if they do not have a description (`rake -P | grep 'foo'`).