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== | == Related pages == | ||
* [[Using ssh]] | |||
* [[Transferring files]] | |||
* [[Working with compressed files]] | |||
== | == Miscellaneous == | ||
== | === Moving and editing on a line === | ||
Works for emacs, and also for the terminal command line which particularly useful for the everyday life | |||
* go towards next(previous) word | |||
* | Esc-f, Esc-b | ||
* go to the end(beginning) of a line | |||
Ctrl-e, Ctrl-a | |||
* Cut text towards end of line and put it into the kill ring | |||
Ctrl-k | |||
* Kills next(previous) word and put it into the kill ring | |||
Esc-d, Esc-Backspace | |||
* Paste what is in the kill ring | |||
Ctrl-y | |||
== | === History of commands === | ||
* a useful command : '!''com''' recalls the last command which first letters are ''com''. For instance: | |||
!a | |||
will call ''acroread file.pdf'' if this was the last command starting with 'a'. | |||
* another way to find a command in the history is to pipe the ''history'' command to ''grep'': | |||
history|grep acroread | |||
===Handling batch jobs=== | |||
* if you want to send a job on a computer and logout without killing the job: | |||
nohup ./job | |||
=== The coma to point conversion in French environment === | |||
for | if you are working with a configuration of Linux which has not the dot "." as a standard format for floating points data (for instance the coma "," in French), you can add the following two lines in your .bashrc file: | ||
LC_NUMERIC=en_US | |||
export LC_NUMERIC | |||
this will make the job without too many side effects. | |||
Latest revision as of 17:23, 9 December 2011
Related pages
Miscellaneous
Moving and editing on a line
Works for emacs, and also for the terminal command line which particularly useful for the everyday life
- go towards next(previous) word
Esc-f, Esc-b
- go to the end(beginning) of a line
Ctrl-e, Ctrl-a
- Cut text towards end of line and put it into the kill ring
Ctrl-k
- Kills next(previous) word and put it into the kill ring
Esc-d, Esc-Backspace
- Paste what is in the kill ring
Ctrl-y
History of commands
- a useful command : '!com' recalls the last command which first letters are com. For instance:
!a
will call acroread file.pdf if this was the last command starting with 'a'.
- another way to find a command in the history is to pipe the history command to grep:
history|grep acroread
Handling batch jobs
- if you want to send a job on a computer and logout without killing the job:
nohup ./job
The coma to point conversion in French environment
if you are working with a configuration of Linux which has not the dot "." as a standard format for floating points data (for instance the coma "," in French), you can add the following two lines in your .bashrc file:
LC_NUMERIC=en_US export LC_NUMERIC
this will make the job without too many side effects.