[ { . Bash shell keybindings cheat sheet SPACE BAR , ; _ ...

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Bash shell keybindings cheat sheet design based on vim cheat sheet: http://viemu.com original idea from http://linuxhelp.blogspot.com by Carlos Fenollosa - http://weblog.topopardo.com ~ ` Complete username - Complete command When pressed alone, completes anything (commands, files...) ! @ # $ % ^ & * ( ) { QWE R T Y U I O P [ : " A S D F G H J K L ; ' < > ? Z X C V B NM, . / Set mark at current char - - - - - - - - Complete hostname Insert a comment symbol (#) Complete variable Insert all completions Start recording a macro End recording a macro _ - Undo - + = - ← Delete word backward from cursor Restore freezed terminal Delete word backward from cursor Jump to EOL Paste the recorded macro Search pattern in previous history Undo all changes to this line Swap current char with previous char Paste content of the kill ring Delete from BOL to cursor - Accept this line and paste previous line Previous command in history Complete filenames in braces - - Swap current word with previous word Rotate kill ring + paste new top element Uppercase word, starting at cursor - Same as C-R but nonincremental - } ] - Type char, search for it Jump to BOL Freeze terminal Delete char under cursor / Exit (if empty) Delete word forward from cursor Move forward a char Abort current line and ring bell Complete filename Backspace - Delete from cursor to EOL Clear/redraw terminal - - - - Move forward a word - - Lowercase word, starting at cursor | \ - Delete blanks on cursor Send process to background (Double X) Swap cursor mark ↔ cur Terminate command Insert next char verbatim (i.e. TAB) Move back a char Next command in history - First command in history Last command in history Show completion list - - Capitalize word, starting at cursor - Move back a word Search pattern in forward history - Paste last arg of prev command Complete filename SPACE BAR Set mark at current char Color key Did you know...? TAB key best auto-completes in almost every case. You can safely ignore other completion keys. If running a program, Ctrl-c sends a SIGTERM, Ctrl-z sends the process to background and the command 'fg' brings it foreground again. Ctrl-x Ctrl-e opens the default $EDITOR and runs the edited command. Key Key AltCtrl-xkey key Note: Divided keys that have no utility are coloured gray. If they are useful with only one modifier, then they are coloured just once for that modifier Controlkey Key To run a program directly into background, apend a & after the program name, like $ ping www.google.com & To kill processes by their name, use 'killall name' The Up and Down cursor keys let you browse through history Ctrl-PageUp and CtrlPageDown let you scroll the terminal, even remote or graphical ones. If running from a remote terminal, background processes will be killed when you logout. To avoid this, use nohup and & like $ nohup wget foo.com & Remember to escape filenames or use quotes (") if there are spaces or special characters: $ ls -l "some document” $ rm make\$\$\$fast.txt And finally, remember that GUIs are cool, but the terminal can save you a lot of time! Change to VI keybindings $ set -o vi Back to Emacs (default) $ set -o emacs

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