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zakruti.com » IT - Software » IT, programs, coding
Linux Commands I Use All the Time - Chris Titus Tech

Linux Commands I Use All the Time - Chris Titus Tech

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Linux Commands I Use All the Time - Chris Titus Tech In this video, I go over Linux commands I use all the time. I will be going over a variety of commands in this video and showing the basics of how I navigate the Linux terminal
Date: 2022-03-21

Comments and reviews: 10


Another great intro video Chris! CLI is so efficient and it 95% of my sysadmin job. I love bash-it, IMHO a great addition to any terminal. I use it with Terminator and my -triple terminal- preset! I love listening to people that share their tips and tricks, what they like and what they use. I continue to learn everyday... after 29 years in the business! And i LOVE Linux and all it offers! You made me want to try Arch Linux, i'm a RHEL/CentOS sysadmin. I use Ubuntu on my laptop...not by choice as i don't like it that much but it does the job... Anyway for me, anything but Winblows and Macs! Keep up the good work!
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Hey Chris, I managed to install Debian Buster (stable) on ThinkPad X230 and it works well with GNOME.
I tried to learn from Debian reference but I feel it is directed to those who already knew the stuff.
Can you point me into reading martial regarding:
1. Terminal handling and text manipulation.
2. Linux and Specifically Debian administration.
3. Is it a good idea to learn C and play around with basic packages or should I use my time to learn python? (I use MATLAB a lot so I have basic programming understanding)

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Hi Chris. I've been using Virtualbox for years now to run Windows inside Linux Mate. Now, I need to dual-boot and am having issues. I have a new laptop with Win 10 on a NVMe drive + a 240GB SSD I want to put Mint on. What I'm puzzling over is that the live USB cannot -see- the NVMe drive at all-- and I was told that I need to put the Mint bootloader onto the Windows drive.
Help? PS: maybe do a video on how to do this. I know I'm not the only one!

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so I just went into my terminal and typed history to see what I use a lot and one of the commands in history. Irony... other than that the usual bunch of aliases I made for myself such as ll, upgrade (which also does an update first), install (also updates first), and my few joke aliases I made with figlet and lolcat that I sometimes use to close terminal instead of just pressing CTRL+D :D
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rm -rf This is really bloody dangerous. Chris should have given people a warning on it's use. Be very careful that you don't have links to other directories within the target directory that are important or even critical. You can totally -#$% your data and if using sudo, even your whole system.
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yip Buster Debian 10 still requires some work , therefore I am sticking with 9.9 stretch , found that some of the commands were not pulling thru properly , ended having to go to usr/sbin/command in order to execute oh well happy days are here again , keep smiling :-) best regards Lance
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Man, no offense but when seeing a list of files in a folder, moving files, deleting files and moving between folders only a nutter would prefer to use the terminal over the sensible option, which is a good old graphic file manager
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Thank you for this video. I was trying to figure out what the pipe (e.g. - symbol) does but doing a Google search didn't give me good results. This should cut the time I spend scrolling in the terminal significantly!
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hey! i got the same prompt! i added a var I can change at top for what colours are used, and used that var in place of the default. it's been a while, so i can't remember the code, exactly.
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Yep, the terminal is definitely something I miss on Windows. I often in the past used to install Cygwin on Windows to replicate it, even though it was slow and sometimes buggy.
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