Difference between revisions of "Linux"

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(The Command Line)
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: read from stdin, or from a file, and replace all occurances of 'old' with 'new', then print to stdout
 
: read from stdin, or from a file, and replace all occurances of 'old' with 'new', then print to stdout
  
==Shell Scripts
+
===Shell Scripts===
 
[[Scripting]]
 
[[Scripting]]

Revision as of 09:14, 7 February 2013

Misc Links

These topics have their own pages.

Getting Started

Gnuplot

Common C, C++, FORTRAN Libraries

The Command Line

Useful Commands

The following is a (short) list of useful command when manipulating data in text files. Some common options are listed, but may not be explained. For full descriptions of each command, see the man page. stdin, stdout, and stderr refer to standard input, output and error, respectively.

ls [dir]
list the contents of a directory to stdout
if no directory is given, the contents of the current directory are listed
common options: -l, -a
cd [dir]
change current working directory to a directory. i.e. go into a directory
used to navigate the filesystem
cat [file1 [ file2 [...] ] ]
print text file(s) to stdout. if multiple files are given, their text is concatenated
useful for starting a pipeline of commands from the contents of a text file
grep "pattern" [ file1 [ file2 [...] ] ]
find text matching 'pattern' in files, or from stdin, and print matching lines to stdout
useful for finding a file containing a specific configuration options
useful for filtering output of a program to only those lines that are interesting
echo [args...]
print arguments to stdout
useful for starting a pipeline of commands from a variable's value
useful for printing output to the terminal from inside a script
sort
read from stdin, sort lines, and write to stdout
common options: -k, -t, -n, -g
cut
read from stdin and write selected columns to stdout.
common options: -d, -f
column
read from stdin and write to stdout such that columns are aligned
common options: -t
head [file]
read from stdin, or from a file, and print the first 10 lines
useful for taking a peak at the contents of a large file
useful for limitng the output of a pipeline
common options: -n
tail [file]
read from stdin, or from a file, and print the last 10 lines
similar uses to head
can be used with head to print a single line, or range of lines, in a file
common options: -n
sed 's/old/new/g' [file]
read from stdin, or from a file, and replace all occurances of 'old' with 'new', then print to stdout

Shell Scripts

Scripting