@Father_Redbeard
alias !="cd .."
Works wonders on azerty keyboards, where ! is close to return key. I guess you could pair another key with ctrl for the same effect ?
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@Father_Redbeard
alias !="cd .."
Works wonders on azerty keyboards, where ! is close to return key. I guess you could pair another key with ctrl for the same effect ?
if i’m not really sure what the contents of a given folder are, and i want to look into files as i go, i’ll often just open vim in file explorer mode
Pardon the ignorant question, but can you do that with a headless server as your target? I've not used Vim at all.
Yes, vim is a command line program.
If you look up "Cli file manager", there's a bunch that you can check out and try.
Tree, grep, and find are usually my three go-tos. Tree to get a general view of a ton of nested files/folders, then if I know a name I'll use find . -name "filename"
, if I know a bit of contents, i'll use `grep -re "content string" to find files containing that.
I recommend reading the man pages because you can often chain together these in fairly powerful ways.
Awesome! You've given me some reading material. Thanks.
Take some bash tutorials on the internet there are loads of them
Learn rsync, it's the best!
I've been a 20 year Linux desktop and server user. I spent my time either in an IDE for development, on a browser, or in shells. Last time I touched a graphical file manager has been years ago, if not decades. Cli shells are so so so so so much more efficient in getting shit done than GUI programs it's not even funny.
Welcome to the dark side, we have cookies!
If you use Linux desktop (you should, it rocks, use KDE!) then install yakuake! It's the friggin best awesome thing ever! F12 and 25 shells drop down on my screen. F12 and I got my browser back.
I just finished buttoning up my new PC build and installed Linux on it, actually. Pop!_OS though because I like the layout and it's very un-Windows-like which is what I was after. I'm excited to learn more!
Still, get yakuake. It's probably my favorite apo
I will! Looks slick. Thanks for the input.
Depends on your workflow and file structure, but nvim with nvchad works great for coding. I also sometimes use ranger to better see file structures.