Computing from the Command Line: Linux command line tools and Shell Scripting for beginner to intermediate level users
439
READERS
203
PAGES
60 DAYS
GUARANTEE
ENGLISH
PDF
EPUB
Book Description
By finelybook
This ebook aims to teach Linux command line tools and Shell Scripting for beginner to intermediate level users. The main focus is towards managing your files and performing text processing tasks. Plenty of examples and exercises are provided to make it easier to understand a particular tool and its various features.
This ebook aims to teach Linux command line tools and Shell Scripting for beginner to intermediate level users. The main focus is towards managing your files and performing text processing tasks. Plenty of examples are provided to make it easier to understand a particular tool and its various features. Exercises at the end of chapters will help you practice what you’ve learned and solutions are provided for reference. External links are provided for further reading.
The features covered in this ebook are shaped and limited by my own experiences since 2007. I had a rough beginning as a design engineer having to learn Linux command line, Vim and Perl on the job. The biggest pain points were not knowing about handy options (for example, grep –color to highlight matching portions, find -exec to apply commands on filtered files, etc) and tools (for example, xargs to workaround limitations of too many command line arguments). And then there were tools like sed and awk with intimidating syntax.
I hope this ebook would make it much easier for you to discover CLI tools, features and learning resources than my own blundering experience.
Prerequisites
You should be familiar with basic computer usage, know fundamental terms like files and directories, how to install programs and so on. You should also be already comfortable with programming basics like variables, loops and functions.
In terms of software, you should have access to the GNU bash shell and commonly used Linux command line tools. This could be as part of a Linux distribution or via other means such as a Virtual Machine, WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) and so on.
You are also expected to get comfortable with reading manuals, searching online, visiting external links provided for further reading, tinkering with illustrated examples, asking for help when you are stuck and so on. In other words, be proactive and curious instead of just consuming the content passively.
Chapters
Preface
Introduction and Setup
Command Line Overview
Managing Files and Directories
Shell Features
Viewing Part or Whole File Contents
Searching Files and Filenames
File Properties
Managing Processes
Multipurpose Text Processing Tools
Sorting Stuff
Comparing Files
Assorted Text Processing Tools
Shell Scripting
Shell Customization