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"fsck the world"
My 2 cents..."For the Win"
nano ftw Sent from my Mobile phone using Tapatalk
@Moltke wrote: "text editor I use the most is nano, yeah nano all the way"I agree. Use Nano a lot myself for BASH stuff, and whatever other editor is available depending on the OS when it's necessary to be out of the CLI, and I use only Gvim for other code bases like ruby and js. I don't know if it's an attempt at a teaching method, but in a lot of tutorials I see text editors recommended for basically no particularly important reason when nano would be the easiest. Small changes might as well use a small editor. TC
$ nano somefile
No not trying to create anything at the moment, I am working through the book, "The Linux Command Line", unsure how many years ago I began it...You can get The Linux Command line as pdf free from the official site http://linuxcommand.org/tlcl.php
I use LL, and Gedit for Python coding
$ wget -qO - https://download.sublimetext.com/sublimehq-pub.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
$ echo "deb https://download.sublimetext.com/ apt/stable/" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/sublime-text.list
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install sublime-text
What I was curious about, my motivation, was how a GUI only displays the most recently mounted storage device, as the output option field, or how to make a GUI do this and if I could use this command ls /dev/sd* by attaching it to a button in a GUI to achieve similar type of result.
I'm not sure what you're trying to do, but it seems that you want to ls into a usb stick? Hope this helps!
As you can see I ran the code , I then inserted a USB stick and used up arrow on keyboard to reuse the same code and run it again, thus allowing for a comparison of before and after adding the USB stick.It produced 2 new results the /dev/sdb and the /dev/sdb1 rather than the 1 new result I was expecting, why is this ?
$ ls /run/media/bitsnpcs