Graphical user interfaces are super friendly to computer users. They were introduced in reaction to the perceived steep learning curve of command-line interfaces (CLIs).
However, they often require more resources, are less powerful and hard to automate via scripting.
As a computer expert, we want to be more efficient and do our jobs better. We know that command words may not be easily discoverable or mnemonic, so we try to list some common tasks that you might be tempted to do in GUI.
- copy a file
- duplicate a file
- copy a directory
- duplicate a directory
- move a file
- rename a file
- move a directory
- rename a directory
- merge directories
- create a new file
- create a new directory
- show file/directory size
- show file/directory info
- open a file with the default program
- zip a directory
- unzip a directory
- peek files in a zip file
- remove a file
- remove a directory
- list directory contents
- tree view a directory and its subdirectories
- find a stale file
- show a calendar
- find a future date
- use a calculator
- force quit a program
- check server response
- view content of a file
- search for a text
- view an image
- show disk size
- check performance of your computer
- Quick tips
- Hotkeys
- I can't remember these cryptic commands
STOP DRAG AND DROPING A FILE, OR CMD/CTRL + C, CMD/CTRL + V A FILE π
Copy readme.txt
to the documents
directory
$ cp readme.txt documents/
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND DUPLICATE A FILE π
$ cp readme.txt readme.bak.txt
More advanced:
$ cp readme{,.bak}.txt
# Note: learn how the {} works with touch foo{1,2,3}.txt and see what happens.
STOP DRAG AND DROPING A DIRECTORY, OR CMD/CTRL + C, CMD/CTRL + V A DIRECTORY π
Copy myMusic
directory to the myMedia
directory
$ cp -a myMusic myMedia/
# or
$ cp -a myMusic/ myMedia/myMusic/
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND DUPLICATE A DIRECTORY π
$ cp -a myMusic/ myMedia/
# or if `myMedia` folder doesn't exist
$ cp -a myMusic myMedia/
STOP DRAG AND DROPING A FILE, OR CMD/CTRL + X, CMD/CTRL + V A FILE π
$ mv readme.txt documents/
Always use a trailing slash when moving files, for this reason.
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND RENAME A FILE π
$ mv readme.txt README.md
STOP DRAG AND DROPING A DIRECTORY, OR CMD/CTRL + X, CMD/CTRL + V A DIRECTORY π
$ mv myMedia myMusic/
# or
$ mv myMedia/ myMusic/myMedia
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND RENAME A DIRECTORY π
$ mv myMedia/ myMusic/
STOP DRAG AND DROPING TO MERGE DIRECTORIES π
$ rsync -a /images/ /images2/ # note: may over-write files with the same name, so be careful!
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND CREATE A NEW FILE π
$ touch 'new file' # updates the file's access and modification timestamp if it already exists
# or
$ > 'new file' # note: erases the content if it already exists
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND CREATE A NEW DIRECTORY π
$ mkdir 'untitled folder'
# or
$ mkdir -p 'path/may/not/exist/untitled\ folder'
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND SHOW FILE/directory INFO π
$ du -sh node_modules/
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND SHOW FILE/DIRECTORY INFO π
$ stat -x readme.md # on macOS
$ stat readme.md # on Linux
STOP DOUBLE CLICKING ON A FILE π
$ xdg-open file # on Linux
$ open file # on MacOS
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND COMPRESS DIRECTORY π
$ zip -r archive_name.zip folder_to_compress
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND UNCOMPRESS DIRECTORY π
$ unzip archive_name.zip
STOP USING WinRAR π
$ zipinfo archive_name.zip
# or
$ unzip -l archive_name.zip
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND DELETE A FILE PERMANENTLY π
$ rm my_useless_file
IMPORTANT: The rm command deletes my_useless_file permanently, which is equivalent to move my_useless_file to Recycle Bin and hit Empty Recycle Bin.
STOP RIGHT CLICKING AND DELETE A DIRECTORY PERMANENTLY π
$ rm -r my_useless_folder
STOP OPENING YOUR FINDER OR FILE EXPLORER π
$ ls my_folder # Simple
$ ls -la my_folder # -l: show in list format. -a: show all files, including hidden. -la combines those options.
$ ls -alrth my_folder # -r: reverse output. -t: sort by time (modified). -h: output human-readable sizes.
STOP OPENING YOUR FINDER OR FILE EXPLORER π
$ tree # on Linux
$ find . -print | sed -e 's;[^/]*/;|____;g;s;____|; |;g' # on MacOS
# Note: install homebrew (https://brew.sh) to be able to use (some) Linux utilities such as tree.
STOP USING YOUR FILE EXPLORER TO FIND A FILE π
Find all files modified more than 5 days ago
$ find my_folder -mtime +5
STOP LOOKING UP WHAT THIS MONTH LOOKS LIKE BY CALENDAR WIDGETS π
Display a text calendar
$ cal
Display selected month and year calendar
$ cal 11 2018
STOP USING WEBAPPS TO CALCULATE FUTURE DATES π
What is todays date?
$ date +%m/%d/%Y
What about a week from now?
$ date -d "+7 days" # on Linux
$ date -j -v+7d # on MacOS
STOP USING CALCULATOR WIDGET π
$ bc
STOP CTRL + ALT + DELETE and choose the program to kill π
$ killall program_name
STOP OPENING A BROWSER π
curl -i umair.surge.sh
# curl's -i (--include) option includes HTTP response headers in its output.
STOP DOUBLE CLICKING A FILE π
$ cat apps/settings.py
# if the file is too big to fit on one page, you can send it to a 'pager' (less) which shows you one page at a time.
$ cat apps/settings.py | less
STOP CMD/CTRL + F IN A DIRECTORY π
$ grep -i "Query" file.txt
STOP USING PREVIEW π
$ imgcat image.png
# Note: requires iTerm2 terminal.
STOP RIGHT CLICKING DISK ICON OR OPENING DISK UTILITY π
$ df -h
STOP OPENING YOUR ACTIVITY MONITOR OR TASK MANAGER π
$ top
Ctrl + A Go to the beginning of the line you are currently typing on
Ctrl + E Go to the end of the line you are currently typing on
Ctrl + L Clears the Screen, similar to the clear command
Ctrl + U Clears the line before the cursor position. If you are at the end of the line, clears the entire line.
Ctrl + H Same as backspace
Ctrl + R Letβs you search through previously used commands
Ctrl + C Kill whatever you are running
Ctrl + D Exit the current shell
Ctrl + Z Puts whatever you are running into a suspended background process. fg restores it.
Ctrl + W Delete the word before the cursor
Ctrl + K Clear the line after the cursor
Ctrl + T Swap the last two characters before the cursor
Esc + T Swap the last two words before the cursor
Alt + F Move cursor forward one word on the current line
Alt + B Move cursor backward one word on the current line
Tab Auto-complete files and directory names
You can always google or man
the commands you are not familiar with. Or, checkout tldr, a collection of simplified and community-driven man pages.