One of UNIX's best features is the shell's command line. Why? Every modern
operating system has a command line; we don't use card readers with
obscure job setup cards any more. What makes UNIX's special?
The UNIX shell command line allows lots of shortcuts. Some of these you'll
find in other operating systems; some you won't. In this chapter,
we'll introduce a lot of these shortcuts.
Among other things, we'll discuss:
Faster erasing (9.2
)
of mistakes with the line-kill and word-erase characters.
(These aren't just a feature of the shell; they work at many places
other than a shell prompt.)
Filename completion (9.8
, 9.9
, 9.10
)
,
which allows you to type the beginning of a
filename and let the shell fill in the rest.
Command substitution (9.16
)
,
which lets you use the output from one command
as arguments to another. (Note: this is different
from
pipelining (1.4
)
.)
Process substitution (9.18
)
in bash
, and a script named !
for other shells, lets you
put the output of a command into a temporary file - and give that filename
to a process.
Type-ahead (9.19
)
,
the ability to type your next command (or commands)
while the previous command is still running.
How to handle
command lines that become too long (9.20
, 9.21
, 9.23
)
.
Some fundamental command-line features that we aren't discussing in
this chapter, but which are discussed elsewhere, are:
Job control (12.1
)
,
which lets you run several commands at the same time.
Aliases (10.2
)
,
or abbreviations, for commands.
Shell functions (10.9
)
are similar.
Command-line editing (11.13
)
and
history substitution (11.1
)
are two different ways (both useful) to "recall" previous commands.
Quoting (8.14
, 8.15
)
,
the way you "protect" special characters from the UNIX shell.
Wildcards (15.2
)
.
You don't need to be a command-line virtuoso to use UNIX effectively.
But you'd be surprised at how much you can do with a few tricks.
If all you can do at the command line is type ls
or start
FrameMaker, you're missing out on a lot.