if you just started getting comfortable with the command line in the last year or three — what helped you?
(no need to reply if you don’t remember, or if you’ve been using the command line comfortably for 20 years — this question isn’t for you :) )
if you just started getting comfortable with the command line in the last year or three — what helped you?
(no need to reply if you don’t remember, or if you’ve been using the command line comfortably for 20 years — this question isn’t for you :) )
nostr:npub1upkp7fd7rc3lrjg23r8gy0wc723vze7mxlx5984ut6zurjzpf5xss4tcwy Pushing myself out of my comfort zone and moving to linux for both personal rig and workstation.
Also, following my whimsy to play with fun command line toys like No More Secrets. https://github.com/bartobri/no-more-secrets
nostr:npub1upkp7fd7rc3lrjg23r8gy0wc723vze7mxlx5984ut6zurjzpf5xss4tcwy This question isn't for me, but I imagine GitHub and co tending to do things via cmd, as well as recent AI tools using Discord as a cmd, might be two reasons "the youths" start to use that sort of interface, nowadays.
nostr:npub1upkp7fd7rc3lrjg23r8gy0wc723vze7mxlx5984ut6zurjzpf5xss4tcwy i've been using th command line for a bit, but in the last 2-3 years i've been more careful about what i have on my .zshrc, keeping it in sync across machines with a git repo, etc
encoding best practices/shortcuts as aliases and functions has helped me better understand how the shell works
i looked up your dotfiles repo sometime ago but noticed it hadn't been updated in a while, i was curious what b0rk could teach me through those files
nostr:npub1upkp7fd7rc3lrjg23r8gy0wc723vze7mxlx5984ut6zurjzpf5xss4tcwy I found the interactive cheat approach interesting. For example :
https://github.com/cheat/cheat
Because it became trivial to make your own with the command you need. And then it helps remember it.
But for the pipe mechanism or AWK, books is what helped me most. For example from A. Robbins, O'Reilly.