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- How to reinitialize a terminal window instead of closing it and . . .
When I make some changes to the shell bash behavior, such as setting up an alias, is there a quick command to reinitialize the terminal window instead of closing and opening a new window?
- How to rename a file in Terminal? - Ask Ubuntu
A simple way to rename files and folders is with the mv command (shortened from “move”) Its primary purpose is moving files and folders, but it can also rename them since the act of renaming a file is interpreted by the filesystem as moving it from one name to another The syntax is: mv (option) file1 ext file2 ext where “file1 ext” is the “old” name of the file, and “file2 ext
- How to show only hidden files in Terminal? - Ask Ubuntu
How to show only hidden files in Terminal? Asked 11 years, 1 month ago Modified 1 year, 8 months ago Viewed 981k times
- What is the difference between shell, console, and terminal?
3 A Terminal is a text-based interface (possibly to a shell) The difference between console and shell is one I don't yet grasp, but I can tell you how a terminal is different from a shell The terminal is (according to Wikipedia) "a serial computer interface for text entry and display
- Is there a command to list all users? Also to add, delete, modify users . . .
I need a command to list all users as well as commands to add, delete and modify users from terminal - any commands that could help in administrating user accounts easily by terminal
- What does ` gt; gt;` mean in terminal command? - Super User
I came across a command just now given below - $ echo 'eval "$(jenv init -)"' >> ~ bash_profile From what i can guess, it is probably used for committing the changes in bash_profile but what exactly is it used for?
- In Windows Terminal, how do I add bash as one of the shell options?
I'm using Windows 10 and just downloaded and installed the latest version of Windows Terminal I would like to use a bash shell within the terminal but when I open the settings, I don't see bash a
- How to run Terminal as root? - Ask Ubuntu
The graphical root terminal job will be both unsuspended and disowned by the non-root terminal, automatically In short: sudo -H gnome-terminal ^Z exit But suppose you wanted to keep using the original, non-root terminal too Then you could run bg N, where N is the graphical root terminal's job number, to resume the job in the background
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