• @[email protected]
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    311 year ago

    These shortcuts aren’t provided by the terminal or the shell but the readline library (or zle if you use zsh), which can be configured using the ~/.inputrc file.

    • Arthur BesseM
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      141 year ago

      Some of these are provided by the readline library (ctrl-a/e/k/y etc), others are provided by the shell (ctrl-c, ctrl-z, etc), and others are the terminal emulator (ctrl-shift-c/v/n/t, etc).

  • @[email protected]
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    171 year ago

    I have a small gripe with this article: CTRL+K, CTRL+U and CTRL+W don’t “delete”, they “cut”, and the clipboard can be accessed with CTRL+Y, which the article also fails to mention.

  • tal
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    1 year ago

    Only the last five are terminal shortcuts (for some terminal emulator, which the author doesn’t specify).

    Most of first ones are specifically emacs-like shortcuts used by readline() as bash uses it. You can also set it up to use vi-like shortcuts (I mean, I use emacs, but just pointing out that they’re there).

    The bang-history stuff with the exclamation points is also a bash feature.

    If you use a shell other than bash, or if you aren’t in the shell, those won’t necessarily apply (unless a given application is also using readline() with emacs-like keybindings).

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    They missed my personal favourite:

    SHIFT + INSERT … paste the content of the PRIMARY select buffer (currently selected text).

  • @mvirts
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    21 year ago

    I wish they just put a biiiit more detail, like good job getting the word out please add some explanation.

  • @wile_e8
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    11 year ago

    Is there any mirror for this? I don’t know if this has been posted to some other site as well, but the web site seems to be overloaded with traffic right now and I can’t see the article.