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Mauro Garcia
Mauro Garcia

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at maurogarcia.dev

Linux Terminal: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet

If you're a Linux user, the Terminal is probably the most powerful tool you would ever have. But the thing about the Terminal is that you need to learn how to use it if you want to benefit from it.

For the last few months, I've been playing with the Terminal a lot, and I came up with a long list of useful commands that I use regularly. Please let me know if I missed something important so I can add it to future posts.



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TL;DR

  • Basic commands
    • Zoom in ➜ [CTRL] + [+]
    • Zoom out ➜ [CTRL] + [-]
    • Print working directory ➜ pwd
    • Clear the terminal ➜ [CTRL] + [l] or clear
    • Assign an alias ➜ alias [alias-name]="[command-to-run]"
    • Source a file ➜ source [name-of-the-file-to-read-and-execute]

  • Change directory command (cd)
    • Move to a specific directory ➜ cd [name-of-your-directory]
    • Move to the parent directory ➜ cd ..
    • Move to the home directory ➜ cd or cd ~
    • Move to the last directory yo were in ➜ cd -

  • List command (ls)
    • List all visible files and directories ➜ ls
    • List all files and directories (include hidden files) ➜ ls -a
    • Long Listed Format ➜ ls -l
    • Human Readable Format ➜ ls -lh
    • Combining arguments: Human Readable Format + Hidden files ➜ ls -lah
    • Learn more about the ls command ➜ man ls

  • Search
    • Locate the binary for a program ➜ which [name-of-the-program]
    • Locate the binary, source and user manual for a program ➜ whereis [name-of-the-program]
    • Locate files and directories by name ➜ find [path-to-search] -iname [name-of-the-file-you-want-to-search]
      • Learn more about the find command ➜ man find
    • Get a brief description for a command ➜ whatis [command-name]

  • History
    • Get previous commands (one by one) ➜ Use the Up Arrow key ⬆️ to navigate your history
    • Get previous commands (full list) ➜ history.
    • Repeat commands from history (bang command) ➜ history![number-of-the-command-to-repeat]
    • Repeat last command (bang-bang command) ➜ !!

  • Working with files and directories
    • Create a new file (without open it) ➜ touch [name-of-your-file]
    • Create a new file using a text editor ➜ vim [name-of-your-file] or nano [name-of-your-file]
    • Copy a file ➜ cp [source-path-of-your-file] [destination-path-for-your-file]
    • Create a new directory ➜ mkdir [new-directory-name]
    • Remove an empty directory ➜ rmdir [name-of-the-directory-you-want-to-remove]
    • Remove command (rm)
      • Remove a file ➜ rm [name-of-your-file]
      • Remove a directory recursively (use with caution) ➜ rm -rf [name-of-your-directory]
    • Concatenate command (cat)
      • View a single file ➜ cat [name-of-your-file]
      • View a single file including the line numbers ➜ cat -n [name-of-your-file]
      • Copy the content of one file to another file ➜ cat [filename-whose-contents-is-to-be-copied] > [destination-filename]
      • Learn more about the cat command ➜ man cat
    • Move command (mv)
      • Move a file ➜ mv [source-path-of-your-file] [destination-path-for-your-file]
      • Rename a file ➜ mv [name-of-your-file] [new name-of-your-file]

Basic commands

Zoom in

Type [CTRL] + [+]

Zoom out

Type [CTRL] + [-]

pwd: Print Working Directory command

It prints the working directory path, starting from the root directory.

mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes

mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects
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Clear command

Type clear or [CTRL] + [l] to clear the entire terminal screen and get a clean terminal to keep working.

Alias command

If you usually run a long command regularly and want to save time, you can assign a shorter alias for that command. Type alias [alias-name]="[command-to-run]" to assign a new alias:

## Running the ls command
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ ls
projects

## Assign an alias, so we don't need to add the arguments every time we need to list something
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ alias ls="ls -lah"

## Running ls again (we get the result of `ls -lah`)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ ls
total 16K
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 17:41 .
drwxr-xr-x 1 root        root         512 Jan 22 10:38 ..
-rw------- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 3.0K Jan 22 23:58 .bash_history
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  220 Jan 22 10:38 .bash_logout
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 3.7K Jan 22 17:32 .bashrc
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  807 Jan 22 10:38 .profile
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 projects
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Note that this alias won't be persisted for future uses. If you want to persist your aliases, add them at the end of your .bashrc file located in your home directory.

Source a file

You can use the source command to read and execute the content of a file line by line. Type source [name-of-the-file-to-read-and-execute]:

## Print the content of the script.txt file (contains two commands)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cat script.txt
echo "hello world" ## Print a hello message
cal                ## Print a calendar

## Source the script.txt to run each command inside
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ source script.txt
hello world

    January 2021
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
                1  2
 3  4  5  6  7  8  9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31
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Change Directory command (cd)

Move to a specific directory

Type cd [name-of-your-directory]:

## Check current directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes

## Change directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ cd projects/

## Check new working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects
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Move to the parent directory

Type cd ..:

## Check current directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects

## Move to the parent directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ cd ..

## Check new working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes
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Move to the home directory

Type cd ~ or just cd as an alternative

## Check current directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/awesome-app$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/awesome-app

## Move to the home directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/awesome-app$ cd ~

## Check new working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes
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Move to the last directory you were in

Type cd - to navigate to the previous directory you were in

## Check the current directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page

## Move to another directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cd /home/mauro_codes/

## Check the new directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes

## Go back to the previus directory you were in
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ cd -
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page
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List command (ls)

Lists the content of the directory you're currently in.

List all visible files and directories

Type ls without any additional argument to get all the files and directories (this command will exclude hidden files like the dotfiles).

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ ls
awesome-app  landing-page  nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter  personal-blog
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List all files and directories

Type ls -a to get all the files and directories (including the hidden files)

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects

## List the content for the working directory (including hidden files)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ ls -a
.  ..  .config  .configu  awesome-app  landing-page  nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter  personal-blog
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Long Listed Format

Type ls -l to get all the visible files and directories including additional metadata like permissions, owner, size and modified date and time.

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter

## List the content for the working directory (using the long listed format)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ ls -l
total 140
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes   4487 Jan 22 12:55 README.md
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes    512 Jan 22 12:55 components
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes   1068 Jan 22 12:55 config.ts
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes    512 Jan 22 12:55 helpers
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Human Readable Format

Type ls -lh to get all the visible files and directories in long-listed format, but with a Human Readable Format (User-friendly file size).

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter

## List the content for the working directory (using the long listed format + human readable format)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ ls -lh
total 140K
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 4.4K Jan 22 12:55 README.md
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 components
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 1.1K Jan 22 12:55 config.ts
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 helpers
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Combining arguments

Type ls -lah to get all the files and directories (including hidden files) in Human Readable Format.

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter

## List the content for the working directory (include hidden files + human readable format)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter$ ls -lah
total 140K
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 13:08 .
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 ..
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 .git
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  362 Jan 22 12:55 .gitignore
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 4.4K Jan 22 12:55 README.md
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 components
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 1.1K Jan 22 12:55 config.ts
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes  512 Jan 22 12:55 helpers
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Learn more about the ls command

There are dozens of arguments that you can use with the ls command. If you want to dig dipper,
type man ls in your terminal to display the user manual for the ls command.

Search

Locate the binary for a program

If you want to locate where the binary (executable) for a specific command or program is located. You can use the which command:

## Locate binary for the ls command
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ which ls
/usr/bin/ls
## Locate binary for git
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ which git
/usr/bin/git
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Locate the binary, source, and user manual for a program

You can use the whereis command to locate the binary, source, and user manual for a program. You can use the -b, -m, and -s arguments to limit the results to binaries, manual and source, respectively

## Locate binary, manual, and source for git
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ whereis git
git: /usr/bin/git /mnt/c/Program Files/Git/cmd/git.exe /usr/share/man/man1/git.1.gz
## Locate only binary and manual for Git, and only the manual for ls command
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ whereis -bm git -m ls
git: /usr/bin/git /mnt/c/Program Files/Git/cmd/git.exe /usr/share/man/man1/git.1.gz
ls: /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz
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Locate files and directories by name

Type find [path-to-search] -iname [name-of-the-file-you-want-to-search] to find any file or directory that contain the given name in their title.

  • The path to search is optional. If it is not specified, the find command will run on your current working directory (and its descendants)
  • The -iname argument means that our search will be case insensitive.
- If you want to learn more about this command, type `man find` to display the user manual.
## Check current working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects

## Find files that contain "posts" on my current working directory and its descendants
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ find -iname posts
./nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter/pages/posts
./nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter/posts
## Find files that contain "posts" on a specific directory and its descendants
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ find ./nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter/pages/ -iname posts
./nextjs-tailwindcss-blog-starter/pages/posts
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Get a brief description for a command

If you don't know what a certain command does, Type whatis [command-name] like this:

## Asking about the cat command
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ whatis cat
cat (1)              - concatenate files and print on the standard output
## Asking about the find command
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects$ whatis find
find (1)             - search for files in a directory hierarchy
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History

Get previous commands (one by one)

You can access your recent command by pressing the Up Arrow key ⬆️. This is very useful if you want to repeat your last command. Let's say we move to a specific directory, and then we check our working directory like this:

## Move to a specific directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ cd projects/awesome-app/

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/awesome-app$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/awesome-app
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⬆️ We'll get the pwd command

⬆️⬆️ We'll get the cd projects/awesome-app command

Repeat previous commands (full list)

Type history to get a numerated list containing the previous commands you run. Then, type ![number-of-the-command-to-repeat] to repeat that command

## Get the history list
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ history
    1  ls
    2  clear
    3  pwd
    4  mkdir projects
    5  cd projects

## Run command number 1 (ls)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ !1
projects
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Repeat the last command

Type !! (bang-bang command) to repeat the last command. This is especially useful when you forgot to add sudo on your last command:

## Running update without sudo (Permission denied)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ apt update
Reading package lists... Done
E: Could not open lock file /var/lib/apt/lists/lock - open (13: Permission denied)
E: Unable to lock directory /var/lib/apt/lists/
W: Problem unlinking the file /var/cache/apt/pkgcache.bin - RemoveCaches (13: Permission denied)
W: Problem unlinking the file /var/cache/apt/srcpkgcache.bin - RemoveCaches (13: Permission denied)

## Using the bang-bang command to append the last command after sudo
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~$ sudo !!
sudo apt update
[sudo] password for mauro_codes:
Get:1 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-security InRelease [109 kB]
Hit:2 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal InRelease
Get:3 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-updates InRelease [114 kB]
...
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Working with files and directories

Create a new file (without open it)

Type touch [name-of-your-file] to create a new file without open it on a text editor. This is useful if you just want to create an empty file but don't need to change it right now.

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md

## Create an empty js file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ touch main.js

## List the content for the working directory (including your new file) 
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  main.js
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Create a new file using a text editor

Type nano [name-of-your-file] to create a new file and open it using the text editor nano. If you want to learn more about nano, you can Type man nano on your terminal to display the nano user manual.

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page

## List the content for the working directory 
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  main.js

mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ nano index.html
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After running the last command, you'll be able to edit the file using nano:
Nano text editor

Copy a file

You can use the cp (Copy) command to copy files and directories
Type cp [source-path-of-your-file] [destination-path-for-your-file] to copy a file into a new destination.

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index.html  main.js  temp

## Copy the README.md file into the temp directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cp README.md temp/README.md

## List the content for the working directory and check that your file is still there.
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index.html  main.js  temp

## List the temp directory's content and check if your file was copied.
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls temp/
README.md  index-copy.html
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Create a new directory

Type mkdir [new-directory-name] to create a new directory in your current working directory

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index-empty-copy.html  index.html  main.js

## Create a new directory called "scripts"
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ mkdir scripts

## List the content to check if our new directory was created
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index-empty-copy.html  index.html  main.js  scripts
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Remove an empty directory

Type rmdir [name-of-the-directory-you-want-to-remove] to remove an empty directory. Please note that this command will only work with empty directories.

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index.html  main.js  temp

## Remove the "temp" empty directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ rmdir temp

## List the content and check that the directory was removed
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index.html  main.js
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Remove command (rm)

Remove a file

Type rm [name-of-your-file] to remove a file

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ ls
README.md  index-copy.html

## Remove the index-copy.html file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ rm index-copy.html

## List the content for the working directory and check that the file was removed
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ ls
README.md
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Remove a directory recursively

Type rm -rfi [name-of-your-directory] to recursively remove a directory with all its files and sub-directories.

Please be careful! This is one of the most dangerous commands you can run. If you run rm -rfi /, you'll erase your entire root partition. Be sure to specify the path for the directory you want to delete. In this example, In this example, I include the -i argument to ask for confirmation.

## List the content of the temp folder (It has one file)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls temp/
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 512 Jan 24 19:45 .
drwxr-xr-x 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes 512 Jan 24 19:44 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 mauro_codes mauro_codes   8 Jan 24 19:45 file.txt

## Recursively remove the temp folder
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ rm -rf temp/

## Check that the temp folder was removed
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls temp/
ls: cannot access 'temp/': No such file or directory
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Concatenate command (cat)

You can use the cat (concatenate) command to read data from a file and print their content as output

View a single file

Type cat [name-of-your-file]:

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page

## Print the content of the index.html file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cat index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8" />
    <meta http-equiv="x-ua-compatible" content="ie=edge" />
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />

    <title>My Website</title>
  </head>

  <body>
    <script src="js/main.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>
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View a single file including the line numbers

Type cat -n [name-of-your-file]:

## Check the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ pwd
/home/mauro_codes/projects/landing-page

## Print the content of the index.html file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cat -n index.html
     1  <!DOCTYPE html>
     2  <html lang="en">
     3    <head>
     4      <meta charset="utf-8" />
     5      <meta http-equiv="x-ua-compatible" content="ie=edge" />
     6      <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
     7
     8      <title>My Website</title>
     9    </head>
    10
    11    <body>
    12      <script src="js/main.js"></script>
    13    </body>
    14  </html>
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Copy the content of one file to another file

Type cat [filename-whose-contents-is-to-be-copied] > [destination-filename]:

## Create an empty file called index-empty-copy.html
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ touch index-empty-copy.html

## Copy the content of index.html to index-empty-copy.html
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cat index.html > index-empty-copy.html

## Print the content of the index-empty-copy.html file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ cat index-empty-copy.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8" />
    <meta http-equiv="x-ua-compatible" content="ie=edge" />
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />

    <title>My Website</title>
  </head>

  <body>
    <script src="js/main.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>
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Learn more about the cat command

Type man cat to display the user manual for the cat command

Move command (mv)

You can use the mv (move) command for moving and renaming files

Move a file

Type mv [source-path-of-your-file] [destination-path-for-your-file] to move a file into a new directory

## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index-empty-copy.html  index.html  main.js  temp

## Move the index-empty-copy.html file to the temp directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ mv index-empty-copy.html temp/index-empty-copy.html

## List the content again and check that the file is no longer in the current working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls
README.md  index.html  main.js  temp

## List the temp folder and check that the file is now there.
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page$ ls temp/
index-empty-copy.html
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Rename a file

Type mv [name-of-your-file] [new name-of-your-file] to rename a file


## List the content for the working directory
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ ls
index-empty-copy.html

## Rename the index-empty-copy.html file
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ mv index-empty-copy.html index-copy.html

## List the content for the working directory (check if your file's name was updated)
mauro_codes@DESKTOP-HIQ7662:~/projects/landing-page/temp$ ls
index-copy.html
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Final words

I missed tons of powerful commands on this post, but I decided to keep them for a future post. This is already huge.😄

I would love to hear your feedback about this format. Is it clear? Is it useful? Let me know if you want me to cover any particular command on my next post.

Top comments (42)

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robertseidler profile image
RobertSeidler

Good overview!

For people who are used to using nano, I recently came across this editor: micro

It's in a similar vein as nano, in terms of simplicity, but with modern features like mouse-support, integrated terminal-emulator (and fitting splits).

I can only recommend you try it :D

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cannuhlar profile image
Can Nuhlar

I was afraid of using vim and instead used nano for almost 3 years. Changing to vim changed my workflow A LOT! I'd really suggest that new comers try to familiarize with vim. You don't have to be power user just Insert & save & quit commands would do fine. When you feel comfortable enough with terminal just switch to vim completely. If you are sshing into servers a lot It'll really make a difference.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

You're talking with a big vim nerd here! 😄I plan to write about that in the future because it is insanely powerful, and, as you said, you just need to know the basics to use it as a regular text editor.

But I wanted to keep this post centered around the terminal.

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cannuhlar profile image
Can Nuhlar

Haha! My reply wasn't to you actually it was against Robert's "micro" suggestion, very good post keep up the good work! I'd really like to see an advanced Vim post here btw. :D

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robertseidler profile image
RobertSeidler

I'm still afraid of using vim xD

Not knowing the quit-command in vim, is a beginners nightmare that can scar you. Someday I'll might look into vim aswell, I hear a lot of good things about it :D

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

I’ve been there! Once you learn the basics, it’s addictive to keep learning. But there is a lot of hate/love around Vim. Is not for everyone.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Thanks for your comments, Robert! I didn't hear about micro, but it looks amazing!! I will definitely try it!

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bogkonstantin profile image
Konstantin Bogomolov

Try also Ctrl + R and type part of the used command. Insteat of the history command.

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cannuhlar profile image
Can Nuhlar

I was here to write the same comment. Reverse searching is awesome!

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

I didn’t know about that one! Thanks for sharing, Konstantin!

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samuelabreu profile image
Samuel Abreu

Useful shortcuts i like:
ctrl + p: Replace [up], last command
ctrl + a: Replace [Home], go to beginning of the line
ctrl + e: Replace [End], go to end of the line
ctrl + f: forward one char
ctrl + b: backward one char
ctrl + w: Deletes one word
esc + f: forward one word
esc + b: backward one word

Useful to who uses keyboard without arrows or just dont wanna move hands.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Thanks for your feedback, Samuel. I didn't know about those shortcuts. They are messing with my head because I'm used to hitting "ctrl + w" and "ctrl + b" to move backward and forward in vim 😂

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zerolife profile image
Andrew Abraham

Don't forget
ctrl - r : Search history for command

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bradnichol profile image
Bradley Nichol

My newest favourite History command uses grep and is great for finding a command that you have a faint memory of.

history | grep "keyword"

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zerolife profile image
Andrew Abraham

just use ctrl - r
Does the same thing. :)

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

True! I included the ctrl + r shortcut in my second post about the Linux terminal (which will be published next Monday)

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

I love that approach! Btw, the grep command is one of the many that I decided to add in another post because this one was already too big 😂

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bradnichol profile image
Bradley Nichol

Great stuff, look forward to reading your next mammoth post 😁

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fwolfst profile image
Felix Wolfsteller

For most situations, I would prefer searching through the history with CTRL+r (you might consider adding that one), but yes sometimes you want to see the full list.

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bradnichol profile image
Bradley Nichol

OK, that's pretty awesome! Thanks for that.

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shwetabh1 profile image
Shwetabh Shekhar

I didn't know about whereis. Highly useful. Thanks for sharing!

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Glad to hear that it was useful! I'm working on the second part of this post so stay tuned!

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shwetabh1 profile image
Shwetabh Shekhar

Looking forward to it :)

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rigeldeveloper profile image
Jhonathan Andres Mauricio La torre

Good job, thanks for the time invested.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

You're welcome Jhonathan! I'm planning to release a second part with more commands! Stay tuned

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rigeldeveloper profile image
Jhonathan Andres Mauricio La torre

Im waiting for that

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slavius profile image
Slavius

Ehm, DESKTOP-HIQ7662? That's Windows terminal and Linux shell...

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

You got me! 😄 I was working on Windows with the Ubuntu Terminal while writing this post. Shame on me 😄

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devlorenzo profile image
DevLorenzo
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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Yep of course

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anmshpndy profile image
Animesh Pandey

Ultra useful, thanks Mauro!

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sairamnagothu profile image
SairamNagothu

Awesome post 🎉👏

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Thanks!

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amirfakour profile image
amir fakoor

whatis and whereis are new for me, thank you.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

You're welcome! Next Monday, I'll publish the second part of this post!

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foley803 profile image
foley803

Tail for looking at log files or files that are being written to.

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Super helpful command! I'll probably include tail, head, and less in upcoming posts!

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atluslux profile image
Johnny Outlaw

This is an awesome resource! Thanks for sharing this!

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

You're welcome, Johnny! Glad to hear that it was useful for you! I'm already working on the second part of that post so stay tuned!

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rishabk7 profile image
Rishab Kumar

Great for beginners!

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mauro_codes profile image
Mauro Garcia

Thanks Rishab! I tried to make this post as inclusive as possible. I'll probably add a second part with more advanced commands

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