From 746f1cc8e5e1f3b4c600c4b4b97055f7845d4a35 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Milad Fatenejad Date: Sun, 1 Apr 2012 16:49:15 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] More updates to shell tutorial --- 1-Shell/Readme.md | 79 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 75 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/1-Shell/Readme.md b/1-Shell/Readme.md index e0123e9..b6d098e 100644 --- a/1-Shell/Readme.md +++ b/1-Shell/Readme.md @@ -442,14 +442,85 @@ in one of the default places for the program. ## Examining Files -The easiest way to examine a file ... +We now know how to switch directories, run programs, and look at the +contents of directories, but how do we look at the contents of files? + +The easiest way to examine a file is to just print out all of the +contents using the program `cat`. Enter the following command: + + cat ex_data.txt + +This prints out the contents of the `ex_data.txt` file. If you enter: + + cat ex_data.txt ex_data.txt + +It will print out the contents of `ex_data.txt` twice. `cat` just +takes a list of file names and writes them out one after another (this +is where the name comes from, `cat` is short for concatenate). * * * * -**Short Exercise** +**Short Exercises** + +1. Print out the contents of the `/usr/share/dict/american-english` + file. What does this file contain? + +2. Without changing directories, (you should still be in `1-Shell`), + use one short command to print the contents of all of the files in + the /home/milad/UofCSCBC2012/1-Shell/data/THOMAS directory. +* * * * + +`cat` is a terrific program, but when the file is really big, it can +be annoying to use. The program, `less`, is useful for this +case. Enter the following command: + + less /usr/share/dict/american-english + +`less` opens the file, and lets you navigate through it. The commands +are identical to the `man` program. Use "space" to go forward and hit +the "b" key to go backwards. The "g" key goes to the beginning of the +file and "G" goes to the end. Finally, hit "q" to quit. + +`less` also gives you a way of searching through files. Just hit the +"/" key to begin a search. Enter the name of the word you would like +to search for and hit enter. It will jump to the next location where +that word is found. Try searching the `american-english` file for the +word "copper". If you hit "/" then "enter", `less` will just repeat +the previous search. `less` searches from the current location and +works its way forward. If you are at the end of the file and search +for the word "copper", `less` will not find it. You need to go to the +beginning of the file and search. + +Remember, the `man` program uses the same commands, so you can search +documentation using "/" as well! -Use the commands we've learned so far to figure out what the `-Wall` -argument for `gcc` does. * * * * +**Short Exercise** + +Use the commands we've learned so far to figure out what the `-fs` +argument for the program `mplayer` does. `mplayer` video playing program. + * * * * + + +## Redirection + +We now know a lot of the basic shell commands. Let's turn to the +experimental data from the hearing tests that we began with. This data +is located in the `~/UofCSCBC2012/1-Shell/data` directory. Each +subdirectory corresponds to a particular participant in the +study. Navigate to the `Bert` subdirectory in `data`. There are a +bunch of text files which contain experimental data results. Lets +print them all: + + cat au* + +Now enter the following command: + + cat au* > ../all_data + +This tells the shell to take the output from the `cat au*` command and +dump it into a new file called `../all_data`. To verify that this +worked, examine the `all_data` file. If `all_data` had already +existed, we would overwritten it. So the `>` # Extra Commands -- 2.26.2