My go to "ls" I know by heart is "ls -lGh" -l : Long listing -G : Don't show groups -h : File size shown in a human readable format (4k instead of 4096) Nice video.
Thank you, Jay, for this video for beginners. I use the Linux mint about 4 days I very excited to learn more about Linux mint. Please do not stop to guide people to learn Linux.
good job man. i was expecting this king of videos since i start using linux. keep it up and hope more people will start loving Linux OS and understand it s power
I have a loaded question/it may not even completely make sense, but from my point of view, its pointless to learn Linux, "IF" every distro has different commands/if I learn the commands for ubuntu, they will mean nothing ln fadora, my point is, I only want to learn things that matter/that are universal accross linux/Unix. My point is sudo apt-get upgrade sudo apt-get update sudo apt-dist-upgrade mean nothing on fadora. So basicly I want to learn things that are relevant, and I want to use unix/linux on any distro. Where do I start and how do I not learn propriotery information/useless information, I want to comunicate with the hardware, not the distro, if that makes sense. Also whats the difference beetween Linux,Unix and Shell? I know this most likley requres a long answer. This question is kind of hard to ask google as well, especially, if you don't know exactly what your saying, and its definitely a loaded question.
@@pspvita99I’m late to this question, but in case you still want to know, you should not attempt to only learn things that are available on every distro. It’s better to be specialized in one or two distros than it is to handicap yourself to only using things that might be in every distro. For the rest, I would recommend looking at the Wikipedia pages.
This is fantastic stuff! I've struggled to find good docs and videos on all manner Linux, and here it seems I'll have all I should need to really get into the jive nice and smoothly.
On Linux Mint 20.3 the "ll" command does work too, but also lists hidden files. The first two lines are ./ and ../ FWIW. Loving this series. Just what I needed. Thanks.
Just one question: I'm a 66 year old willing to learn Linux System though I'm complete rookie! Question is how the Linode Cloud service may be of service to me at this point? Thank you! and thanks for the videos!
I'm just a noobie, but I notice something. `ls` shows the files, one per line, so it makes sense, for me, to think "line" not "long" `ll` isn't just an alias for `ls -l` It shows also the invisible .files. Like Spock would say: "fascinating"
I'm studying cybersecurity through Google Coursea and struggling to grasp Commands in bash on this lab. Trying to figure how to get to company dept and specific employee id number. in Coursea module. Hope this helps . They give 4 tries , I used one up. I get so anxious when that happens
@LearnLinuxTV Let me begin by thanking You for Your excellent tutorials, and for taking the effort of making them and sharing Your knowledge. And in case no one else has informed You, AND You still want to promote Your book, I also want to make You aware that the link to Your book supplied in Your comment appears to be broken. The addresst ((ubuntuserverbook.com)) only results in a "This site can’t be reached" ((tested with "Brave" and "Firefox", on Ubuntu )) I don't know if it's so simple that You just by mistake forgot to add the "www." in the address, but when I added that it "redirected" me to an Amazon page for Your book.. Just thought You should know Best regards
When I use ls I like to do 'ls -lh', but can I make it only make it display the columns I want? I'm thinking of only looking at the file or directory name and the size.
I have a loaded question/it may not even completely make sense, but from my point of view, its pointless to learn Linux, "IF" every distro has different commands/if I learn the commands for ubuntu, they will mean nothing ln fadora, my point is, I only want to learn things that matter/that are universal accross linux/Unix. My point is sudo apt-get upgrade sudo apt-get update sudo apt-dist-upgrade mean nothing on fadora. So basicly I want to learn things that are relevant, and I want to use unix/linux on any distro. Where do I start and how do I not learn propriotery information/useless information, I want to comunicate with the hardware, not the distro, if that makes sense. Also whats the difference beetween Linux,Unix and Shell? I know this most likley requres a long answer. This question is kind of hard to ask google as well, especially, if you don't know exactly what your saying, and its definitely a loaded question.
Most commands are the same from one distro to another. The package manager is one difference, but for the most part, all the other commands carry over from one to the next.