alias fuck="sudo !!"
i’m also a fan of
alias please="sudo !!"
I’m so stealing this.
lol I’ve had this exact line in my profile for years ❤
cd -
goes back to the last directory you have been inpushd
andpopd
are also pretty neat in that they allow you to change directories using a stack; particularly useful as part of that is that usingpushd
without any arguments will pop the directory on top of the stack and move you there, while putting your previous directory on top of the stack. When you’re working across directories where you need to move around within each directory, it can be really handy.Nice!
Also
cd
without any parameters takes you to your home directory.‘cd …’ goes up a level
Julia Evans’ (@[email protected] on mastodon) website[0] is loaded with similar info-comics and exploration of development and networking tools, among other things.
Bottom left example will leave you with a lot pictures ending on “.png.jpg”.
What’s a better way?
convert $i ${i%.*}.jpg
NB: I’m no guru - I just googled “remove file extension in bash”.
Should also definitely be quoting both arguments
The most useful bash trick for me is to save what I learn in demonstration scripts so I can $cat it later for a syntax reminder.
ex :
file named : ./follow_jellyfin_system_logcontents :
#!/bin/bash
journalclt -fe -u jellyfin(some time later) … wtf args do i pass to journalctl again…
$ls ./script_parent_directory
(list of actions written in human language appear as file names)
$cat ./follow_jellyfin_system_log
me : “oh duh!”
rinse and repeat for every command or shortcut you learn, it forces you to convert the command into a short “noun_verb” format which to me is infinitely more understandable.
that’s my workflow. then the meta is deciding how to store your scripts so you don’t end up with a polluted home dir. godspeed fellow bashers.
For shorter, often used workflows i end up making an alias in bashrc/zshrc.
Tbh, I should consider migrating some of my one-liners to bash aliases. I just like to be cautious to not pollute my shell’s auto-complete.
You can always start them off with an underscore ;)
lots more emacs shortcuts
You’re referring to libreadline, which supports both vi and emacs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Readline
Ctrl + _
is a pretty overlooked commandRemember for $() to wrap it in quotes to prevent word splitting!!!
Another cool bash trick: $! gets all the arguments of the previous command, but not the command itself
The most useful bash command of all:
sudo apt-get -y install zsh; chsh -s zsh; exec zsh
;)I kid, I kid! I actually like bash a lot. I really prefer it for scripting. Arrays are extremely useful but not specified in posix. Bash is pretty ubiquitous though.
I’m also curious if there are any bash partisans who prefer it over zsh and for what reasons.
I actually prefer fish, but I want to learn more bash because is is ubiquitous and a lot of bash stuff also works in fish.
You may also like NuShell. It’s been designed from the ground up to be an intuitive and convenient shell language.
Wait, the other shells were designed to be obtuse and inconvenient? /s
Haha whoops, didn’t want to imply that. I meant to say that it’s intuitive for me, who finds bash syntax cryptic.
Can you tell me how to run a command and ignore an alias in NuShell? I don’t really use nu but when i tried to write something in it, this was something that eluded me
Oh, if you want to avoid running a built in command like
ls
orcp
and want to run the actual thing in/usr/bin
, you prefix it with a^
, so eg^cp -p
.Interesting. What does the ^ do in this situation?
And I just want to not respect an alias, so falls back to either builtin or path.
In zsh or bash I can prefix the command with the word command, or a backslash (directly before the command)
https://www.nushell.sh/book/escaping.html
I don’t know whether unsetting an alias is possible though.
https://www.nushell.sh/book/aliases.html#replacing-existing-commands-using-aliases
Fish is great! I used it for a while a long time ago but I ended up stopping because a few tools expected your shell to be set to something posix compatible. I wonder if the support is better now, I should give it a shot
I’m a serious bash scripter, I mean I do it both at work and as a hobby. And zsh arrays are better. Like you can use negative indecees and stuff. I have only written shell functions in zsh (my primary shell), and not thousands of lines of scripts like I have for bash. But if zsh had as good documentation and language servers I’d probably do many scripts in zsh instead. But I can’t say for certain, as I am not as sure about performance in some situations and stuff.
Why don’t I use posix shell if I care about performance? Because they are only faster in very simple scripts,
another useful one is <(cmd here)
It’s like $(cmd here) but instead of returning the output of the command as a string passed into the arguments, it makes a new file descriptor for the output of the command and returns the path to it, for use in commands that want a file as an argument.
So for example if you want to use diff to compare your local passwd file to a remote one…
diff -u <(ssh host1 cat /etc/passwd) /etc/passwd
Admittedly I can’t think of many things I’ve used this for outside of diff and alternatives to diff…but I’ve used it there a lot, like comparing the results of running two slightly different queries.
I use this one for comm a lot. E.g.,
comm -12 <(sort some_file) <(grep foo some_other_file | sort)
Oh my god, I didn’t realize this was an NSFW community. This graphic changed my life
I am not sure what the default keybinding is for this but I always create a
.inputrc
file for searching forward and backward in the history without opening the C-r menu:"C-p": history-search-backward "C-n": history-search-forward