![]() The vi Editor 11.1 Review of vi Operations 11.2 vi Command-Line Options 11.3 ex Command-Line Options 11.4 Movement Commands 11.5 Edit Commands 11.6 Saving and Exiting 11.7 Accessing Multiple Files 11.8 Window Commands 11.9 Interacting with the Shell 11.10 Macros 11.11 Miscellaneous Commands 11.12 Alphabetical List of Keys in Command Mode 11.13 Syntax of ex Commands 11.14 Alphabetical Summary of ex Commands 11.15 vi Configuration Chapter 12. ![]() The Emacs Editor 10.1 Emacs Concepts 10.2 Typical Problems 10.3 Notes on the Tables 10.4 Summary of Commands by Group 10.5 Summary of Commands by Key 10.6 Summary of Commands by Name Chapter 11. Pattern Matching 9.1 Filenames Versus Patterns 9.2 Metacharacters, Listed by Linux Program 9.3 Metacharacters 9.4 Examples of Searching Chapter 10. tcsh: An Extended C Shell 8.1 Overview of Features 8.2 Invoking the Shell 8.3 Syntax 8.4 Variables 8.5 Expressions 8.6 Command History 8.7 Command-Line Manipulation 8.8 Job Control 8.9 Built-in Commands Chapter 9. ![]() bash: The Bourne-Again Shell 7.1 Invoking the Shell 7.2 Syntax 7.3 Variables 7.4 Arithmetic Expressions 7.5 Command History 7.6 Job Control 7.7 Built-in Commands Chapter 8. The Linux Shells: An Overview 6.1 Purpose of the Shell 6.2 Shell Flavors 6.3 Common Features 6.4 Differing Features Chapter 7. Red Hat and Debian Package Managers 5.1 The Red Hat Package Manager 5.2 The Debian Package Manager Chapter 6. Boot Methods 4.1 The Boot Process 4.2 LILO: The Linux Loader 4.3 GRUB: The Grand Unified Bootloader 4.4 GRUB Commands 4.5 Loadlin: Booting from MS-DOS 4.6 Dual-Booting Linux and Windows NT/2000/XP 4.7 Boot-Time Kernel Options 4.8 initrd: Using a RAM Disk Chapter 5. Linux Commands 3.1 Alphabetical Summary of Commands Chapter 4. System and Network Administration Overview 2.1 Common Commands 2.2 Overview of Networking 2.3 Overview of TCP/IP 2.4 Overview of Firewalls and Masquerading 2.5 Overview of NFS 2.6 Overview of NIS 2.7 Administering NIS 2.8 RPC and XDR Chapter 3. ![]() Introduction 1.1 The Excitement of Linux 1.2 Distribution and Support 1.3 Commands on Linux 1.4 What This Book Offers 1.5 Sources and Licenses 1.6 Beginner's Guide Chapter 2. ![]() Linux in a Nutshell, 4th Edition Table of Contents Copyright Preface Other Resources Conventions We'd Like to Hear from You Acknowledgments Chapter 1. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |