advanced terminal
or
advanced tips and tricks
?You can use
-
everywhere you can use a ref in a git command. I very often usegit checkout master git pull git checkout - git merge -
(Of course that’s all aliased and I have other flags in there too, but that’s the gist)
Same for
cd -
. Nice if you want to go to/etc/blah
, and then back to where you were.You can also use
pushd
andpopd
which will push and pop directories from a stack, if you need to do something more complex.Also, if you want to switch faster between branches, slap this in your
~/.gitconfig
under[alias]
:co = !git checkout $(git for-each-ref refs/heads/ --format='%(refname:short)' | fzf)
Presuming you’ve got
fzf
installed, you can nowgit co
(co = checkout) to get a menu with fuzzy find capabilities to switch between branches. Nice if branch names are long/similar/only-different-at-the-end.fzf
is dope.
My favorite tips are:
You can filter the output of a command. Most commands return parameters like
(output, error)
so you can filter them by number like1>/dev/null
will filter the output and only show the errors, and2>/dev/null
will filter the errors and only show the output. Also if you want a command to run silently but it doesn’t have it’s own built-in quiet mode you can add&>/dev/null
which will filter everything.Bash (and other shell’s I assume) can be fully customized. In addition to the .bashrc file in your home directory, there are also a few common files that bash will look for like
.bash_aliases, .bash_commands, .bash_profile
or you can create your own and just add to the end of the .bashrc file./YOUR_CUSTOM_BASH_FILE_NAME
Inside that file you can add any custom commands you want to run for every bash shell like aliases and what not.
I personally often use a simple update command like so
alias up='sudo apt update -y && sudo apt upgrade -y && sudo apt autoremove -y'
which just makes running updates, upgrades, and clean-up so much easier. Just typeup
and enter your password. I have previously added in things like&>/dev/null
to quiet the commands andecho Fetching updates...
to make some commands quieter but still give some simple feedback.There’s also the basics of moving around a terminal command as others have pointed out. The easiest and the one I use the most is if you hold CTRL+LEFT_ARROW the cursor will move entire words instead of one character at a time. Very helpful if you need to change something in the middle of a command.
What can
tmux
do that you can’t do using startup and exiting scripts?Retain sessions when you’re over SSH and get disconnected.
I’m surprised this wasn’t mentioned, since it’s my only use case for tmux.
I use dtach for this feature
Ctl-U to delete everything on the line before cursor.
Ctl-E to skip to end of line.
Ctl-A to skip to beginning of line.
Ctrl-y to paste what Ctrl-u deleted or cut
That’s a new one for me. Thanks!
Or, just use Home and End like they were intended! Kids these days….
Kids these days….
These Ctrl keys are shortcuts from Emacs - there’s a Bash settings to switch to vi-mode if you so wish. Anyway, the first Emacs was written in 1981, probably on a PDP-11, which did not have Home and End! Same reason Neovim uses “yank” instead of “copy”.
ctrl-c
/ctrl-v
did not exist as a shortcut back when vi was being written!I know you didn’t intend to be mean or anything, but maaaaaan kids these days don’t know their history (not entirely your fault, btw)😆
That’s horrible for muscle memory, every time I switch desk/keyboard I have to re-learn the position of the home/end/delete/PgUp/PgDn keys.
I got used to
Ctrl-a
/Ctrl-e
and it became second nature, my hands don’t have to fish for extra keys, to the point that it becomes annoying when a program does not support that. Some mapCtrl-a
to “Select all” so, for input fields where the selection is one line, I’d ratherCtrl-a
thenleft
/right
to go to the beginning/end than fish forhome
/end
, wherever they are.This tip is super useful to me because not everyone is using a PC. On a PC sure, I would use the Home and End keys all the time. Now I’m using a laptop as my main computer and the Home and End keys are in a weird position that even to this day, 4ish years of laptop use, I still have to actually look at the keys to find them.
If you’re a VIM motions fan, you can always install the zsh-vi-mode: https://github.com/jeffreytse/zsh-vi-mode.
ctrl-b: move cursor back one character
ctrl-f: move cursor foward one character
ctrl-d: delete character under cursor
But that’s more key presses than just using existing keys