Strategies for storing/recording/remembering CLI commands
What strategies do people use to store, record or remember new or useful CLI commands?
For example, Anki is a useful flashcard spaced repetition memorisation tool. Or simply copying new or useful commands into a spreadsheet or cheat-sheet style document for reference until they're committed to memory through use.
Comments
-
Hi @chrisfeig ,
I haven't used Anki, but it seems some participants find it useful. I use to save some commands to a file, but I think the best is to use the commands in the daily work, because if not, I forget them, hehehe.
Many regards,
Luis.0 -
I guess anki is the answer because for those of us that do not work in a Linux environment there is no much options.
0 -
Linux systems always have both man pages and built in help commands. So for example suppose you want to use "ls" but don't remember the exact usage. You can get a quick sense by doing:
ls --help | less
and get much more detail by doing
man ls
(ls --help actually is quite a long output but most commands are shorter)
Of course you have to remember the name of the command, but the number you have to have at your fingertips is not that large, because the UNIX philosophy to pipe simple commands together to do more complex tasks. Anyway, that is how most of us do day to day work, we don't try to look up things that much and explicit memorization really usually doesn't help that much because you cannot memorize all the possible options etc. you just have to remember there is some kind of option for doing that and then look at online resources to remind you of it
We all have different methods, but personally I just think there is too much to memorize. And I'm old enough that my short term memory is atrocious now, so something like Akami just would not work for me. Doing things does adjust my neurons some.
2 -
I use Dash (https://kapeli.com/dash) and find it really useful for snippets.
It's primary use-case is documentation reference but the snippet feature has lots of functionality, including integration with CLI (as well as bunch of other tools). That unlocks the ability to use snippet names as aliases on the CLI - without you needing to manually update your
.bashrc
fileYou can also put placeholders in snippets. On expansion on the CLI it will prompt you to fill in the placeholders, very cool.
You can tag snippets to help with indexing. It's also very configurable.
I've put in one feature request for a consistent way to add annotations to snippets but you can get around this with comments.
The only thing that would make it complete would be if it were open-source or had a plugin-system to extend it's functionality.
2 -
@coop said:
Linux systems always have both man pages and built in help commands. So for example suppose you want to use "ls" but don't remember the exact usage. You can get a quick sense by doing:ls --help | less
and get much more detail by doing
man ls
(ls --help actually is quite a long output but most commands are shorter)
Of course you have to remember the name of the command, but the number you have to have at your fingertips is not that large, because the UNIX philosophy to pipe simple commands together to do more complex tasks. Anyway, that is how most of us do day to day work, we don't try to look up things that much and explicit memorization really usually doesn't help that much because you cannot memorize all the possible options etc. you just have to remember there is some kind of option for doing that and then look at online resources to remind you of it
We all have different methods, but personally I just think there is too much to memorize. And I'm old enough that my short term memory is atrocious now, so something like Akami just would not work for me. Doing things does adjust my neurons some.
Very good point!
0
Categories
- All Categories
- 64 LFX Mentorship
- 117 LFX Mentorship: Linux Kernel
- 618 Linux Foundation IT Professional Programs
- 322 Cloud Engineer IT Professional Program
- 141 Advanced Cloud Engineer IT Professional Program
- 56 DevOps Engineer IT Professional Program
- 67 Cloud Native Developer IT Professional Program
- 6 Express Training Courses
- 6 Express Courses - Discussion Forum
- 2.4K Training Courses
- 19 LFC110 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 9 LFC131 Class Forum
- 31 LFD102 Class Forum
- 178 LFD103 Class Forum
- LFD110 Class Forum
- 24 LFD121 Class Forum
- LFD133 Class Forum
- 2 LFD137 Class Forum
- 62 LFD201 Class Forum
- 2 LFD210 Class Forum
- 1 LFD210-CN Class Forum
- 1 LFD213 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 128 LFD232 Class Forum - Discontinued
- LFD233 Class Forum
- LFD237 Class Forum
- 23 LFD254 Class Forum
- 660 LFD259 Class Forum
- 108 LFD272 Class Forum
- 1 LFD272-JP クラス フォーラム
- 4 LFD273 Class Forum
- 1 LFS101 Class Forum
- LFS116 Class Forum
- 2 LFS145 Class Forum
- LFS151 Class Forum
- LFS158 Class Forum
- LFS167 Class Forum
- 28 LFS200 Class Forum
- 740 LFS201 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 1 LFS201-JP クラス フォーラム
- 13 LFS203 Class Forum
- 98 LFS207 Class Forum
- 301 LFS211 Class Forum
- 54 LFS216 Class Forum
- 47 LFS241 Class Forum
- 41 LFS242 Class Forum
- 38 LFS243 Class Forum
- 12 LFS244 Class Forum
- LFS245 Class Forum
- 41 LFS250 Class Forum
- 1 LFS250-JP クラス フォーラム
- LFS251 Class Forum
- 143 LFS253 Class Forum
- LFS254 Class Forum
- LFS255 Class Forum
- 2 LFS256 Class Forum
- LFS257 Class Forum
- 1.2K LFS258 Class Forum
- 10 LFS258-JP クラス フォーラム
- 109 LFS260 Class Forum
- 147 LFS261 Class Forum
- 39 LFS262 Class Forum
- 83 LFS263 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 15 LFS264 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 11 LFS266 Class Forum - Discontinued
- 21 LFS267 Class Forum
- 18 LFS268 Class Forum
- 26 LFS269 Class Forum
- 204 LFS272 Class Forum
- 1 LFS272-JP クラス フォーラム
- LFS274 Class Forum
- 3 LFS281 Class Forum
- 258 LFW211 Class Forum
- 179 LFW212 Class Forum
- 9 SKF100 Class Forum
- SKF200 Class Forum
- 908 Hardware
- 221 Drivers
- 74 I/O Devices
- 44 Monitors
- 116 Multimedia
- 210 Networking
- 102 Printers & Scanners
- 86 Storage
- 765 Linux Distributions
- 88 Debian
- 66 Fedora
- 15 Linux Mint
- 13 Mageia
- 24 openSUSE
- 144 Red Hat Enterprise
- 33 Slackware
- 13 SUSE Enterprise
- 357 Ubuntu
- 484 Linux System Administration
- 40 Cloud Computing
- 71 Command Line/Scripting
- Github systems admin projects
- 95 Linux Security
- 80 Network Management
- 108 System Management
- 52 Web Management
- 75 Mobile Computing
- 25 Android
- 35 Development
- 1.2K New to Linux
- 1.1K Getting Started with Linux
- 544 Off Topic
- 131 Introductions
- 223 Small Talk
- 22 Study Material
- 836 Programming and Development
- 285 Kernel Development
- 517 Software Development
- 975 Software
- 261 Applications
- 185 Command Line
- 3 Compiling/Installing
- 119 Games
- 318 Installation
- 65 All In Program
- 65 All In Forum
Upcoming Training
-
August 20, 2018
Kubernetes Administration (LFS458)
-
August 20, 2018
Linux System Administration (LFS301)
-
August 27, 2018
Open Source Virtualization (LFS462)
-
August 27, 2018
Linux Kernel Debugging and Security (LFD440)