Command | Definition |
---|---|
. |
a single period refers to the current directory |
.. |
a double period refers to the directory immediately above the current directory |
~ |
refers to your home directory. Note: this command does NOT work on Windows machines (Mac and Linux are okay) |
cd ./dirname |
changes the current directory to the directory dirname |
ls -F |
tells you what files and directories are in the current directory |
pwd |
tells you what directory you are in (pwd stands for print working directory) |
history |
lists previous commands you have entered. `history |
man cmd |
displays the manual page for a command. |
Command | Definition |
---|---|
mkdir ./dirname |
makes a new directory called dirname below the current directory. Note: Windows users will need to use \ instead of / for the path separator |
nano filename |
if filename does not exist, nano creates it and opens the nano text editor. If the file exists, nano opens it. Note: (i) You can use a different text editor if you like. In gnome Linux, gedit works really well too. (ii) nano (or gedit ) create text files. It doesn't matter what the file extension is (or if there is one) |
Command | Definition |
---|---|
rm ./filename |
deletes a file called filename from the current directory |
rmdir ./dirname |
deletes the directory dirname from the current directory. Note: dirname must be empty for rmdir to run. |
Command | Definition |
---|---|
mv tmp/filename . |
moves the file filename from the directory tmp to the current directory. Note: (i) the original filename in tmp is deleted. (ii) mv can also be used to rename files (e.g., mv filename newname |
cp tmp/filename . |
copies the file filename from the directory tmp to the current directory. Note: (i) the original file is still there |
Wildcards are a shell feature that makes the command line much more powerful than any GUI file managers. Wildcards are particularly useful when you are looking for directories, files, or file content that can vary along a given dimension. These wildcards can be used with any command that accepts file names or text strings as arguments.
Wildcard | Matches |
---|---|
* |
zero or more characters |
? |
exactly one character |
[abcde] |
exactly one of the characters listed |
[a-e] |
exactly one character in the given range |
[!abcde] |
any character not listed |
[!a-e] |
any character that is not in the given range |
{software,carpentry} |
exactly one entire word from the options given |
See the cheatsheet on regular expressions for more "wildcard" shortcuts.
Redirection operators can be used to redirect the ouput from a program from the display screen to a file where it is saved (or many other places too, like your printer or to another program where it can be used as input).
Command | Description |
---|---|
> |
write stdout to a new file; overwrites any file with that name (e.g., ls *.md > mardkownfiles.txt ) |
>> |
append stdout to a previously existing file; if the file does not exist, it is created (e.g., ls *.md >> markdownfiles.txt ) |
< |
assigns the information in a file to a variable, loop, etc (e.g., n < markdownfiles.md ) |
A special kind of redirection is called a pipe and is denoted by |
.
Command | Description |
---|---|
| | Output from one command line program can be used as input to another one (e.g. ls *.md | head gives you the first 5 *.md files in your directory) |
ls *.md | head | sed -i `s/markdown/software/g`
changes all the instances of the word markdown
to software
in the first 5 *.md
files in your current directory.
Loops assign a value in a list or counter to a variable that takes on a different value each time through the loop.
There are 2 primary kinds of loops: for
loops and while
loops.
For loops loop through variables in a list
for varname in list
do
command 1
command 2
done
where,
for
,in
,do
, anddone
are keywordslist
contains a list of values separated by spaces. e.g.list
can be replaced by1 2 3 4 5 6
or byBob Mary Sue Greg
.list
can also be a variable:
--
list[0]=Sam
list[1]=Lynne
list[2]=Dhavide
list[3]=Trevor
.
.
.
list[n]=Mark
which is referenced in the loop by:
for varname in ${list[@]}
do
command 1
command 2
done
Note: Bash is zero indexed, so counting always starts at 0
, not 1
.
While loops loop through the commands until a condition is met. For example
COUNTER=0
while [ ${COUNTER} -lt 10 ]; do
command 1
command 2
COUNTER=`expr ${COUNTER} + 1`
done
continues the loop as long as the value in the variable COUNTER is less than 10 (incremented by 1 on each iteration of the loop).
while
,do
, anddone
are keywords
Operator | Definition |
---|---|
-eq |
is equal to |
-ne |
is not equal to |
-gt |
greater than |
-ge |
greater than or equal to |
-lt |
less than |
-le |
less than or equal to |
Use man bash
or man test
to learn about other operators you can use.
To find information within files, you use a command called grep
.
Example command | Description |
---|---|
grep [options] day haiku.txt |
finds every instance of the string day in the file haiku.txt and pipes it to standard output |
grep options |
|
---|---|
-E |
tells grep you will be using a regular expression. Enclose the regular expression in quotes. Note: the power of grep comes from using regular expressions. Please see the regular expressions sheet for examples |
-i |
makes matching case-insensitive |
-n |
limits the number of lines that match to the first n matches |
-v |
shows lines that do not match the pattern (inverts the match) |
-w |
outputs instances where the pattern is a whole word |
To find file and directory names, you use a command called find
Example command | Description |
---|---|
find . -type d |
find recursively descends the directory tree for each path listed to match the expression given in the command line with file or directory names in the search path |
find options |
|
---|---|
-type [df] |
d lists directories; f lists files |
-maxdepth n |
find automatically searches subdirectories. If you don't want that, specify the number of levels below the working directory you would like to search |
-mindepth n |
starts find 's search n levels below the working directory |