From bash to zsh and everywhere in between, show me yours and I’ll show you mines. Inspire others or get some feedback.
Simply copy & paste the output of alias in your terminal or add some comments to explain things for others.
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alias a='alias' a c='clear' a p='pwd' a e='exit' a q='exit' a h='history | tail -n20' # turn off history, use 'set -o history' to turn it on again a so='set +o history' a b1='cd ../' a b2='cd ../../' a b3='cd ../../../' a b4='cd ../../../../' a b5='cd ../../../../../' a ls='ls --color=auto' a l='ls -ltrhG' a la='l -A' a vi='gvim' a grep='grep --color=auto' # open and source aliases a oa='vi ~/.bash_aliases' a sa='source ~/.bash_aliases' # sort file/directory sizes in current directory in human readable format a s='du -sh -- * | sort -h' # save last command from history to a file # tip, add a comment to end of command before saving, ex: ls --color=auto # colored ls output a sl='fc -ln -1 | sed "s/^\s*//" >> ~/.saved_commands.txt' # short-cut to grep that file a slg='< ~/.saved_commands.txt grep' # change ascii alphabets to unicode bold characters a ascii2bold="perl -Mopen=locale -Mutf8 -pe 'tr/a-zA-Z/𝗮-𝘇𝗔-𝗭/'" ### functions # 'command help' for command name and single option - ex: ch ls -A # see https://github.com/learnbyexample/command_help for a better script version ch() { whatis $1; man $1 | sed -n "/^\s*$2/,/^$/p" ; } # add path to filename(s) # usage: ap file1 file2 etc ap() { for f in "$@"; do echo "$PWD/$f"; done; } # simple case-insensitive file search based on name # usage: fs name # remove '-type f' if you want to match directories as well fs() { find -type f -iname '*'"$1"'*' ; } # open files with default application, don't print output/error messages # useful for opening docs, pdfs, images, etc from command line o() { xdg-open "$@" &> /dev/null ; } # if unix2dos and dos2unix commands aren't available by default unix2dos() { sed -i 's/$/\r/' "$@" ; } dos2unix() { sed -i 's/\r$//' "$@" ; }
What do you use the ascii to bold function for?
I used to use it for posting on Twitter, with some keywords (like book title) in bold.