Over the years of using Windows (2010-2023), I don't remember learning anything at all, only using the command line twice, once to check the hard disk and once to clean the registry... I'm in love with Linux terminal.
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Did you not learn anything because you simply did not need to, perhaps? Because you can do a lot if you need to.
I guess so.
Same with arson
What's the Venn Diagram of "childhood pyromaniacs" and "Linux users" look like?
It's just 1 circle with both labels in it.
I'm sure this will draw some criticism but I've found duck.ai to be extremely helpful in troubleshooting minor issues with my Linux mint installation and recently with accessing and understanding SMART hard drive diagnostic data. It's very helpful in figuring out which commands could be useful in the terminal and in understanding exactly what each terminal command is doing. Of course finding answers in forums and manuals is still relevant and important but as a beginner, this has been a fast and easy way to get advice.
Just be careful to think twice before doing what it says. (That goes for any advice from the internet too!)
Like all the old stories of people's GPS steering them into a lake. Let the GPS help you, but still, like, actually look at the road!
ETA: It's probably quite reliable at explaining what terminal commands do, since it's drawing from many manuals. But sometimes it might completely make up the answer, in a way that's almost right but terribly wrong. You think the command does one thing, so you use it 'appropriately', but really it does something else so your carefully thought out use goes completely wrong.
And the less you use Windows, the worse you get at using it. Luckily the bar for Windows competency is pretty low, just basic critical thinking skills and Google get you far.
You can make that point for any operating system, basic critical thinking could mean anything
Honestly, potentially the more you use Windows the worse you get at it. You come to accept the garbage, but the more you try to fix it the more it fights you and the less stable it becomes. A user who just doesn't touch anything is probably better off.
Do you guys also keep a notepad file on your desktop with all the usual commands and shortcuts on it? I can't imagine remembering them all otherwise... and I kind of cringe at the non stop DDG ing I have to do to do some basic liux stuff.
I'm using my companies' mediawiki personal user page to keep snippets and one liners that took me some time to cobble together. I export that regularly to a personal device, so, yes. I've found that I never look at it because once I've hammered something together I usually got the concept so next time it takes me a fraction of the time.
Yes.
Source: Am Systems Admin (engineer/architect/your mom)
This guy's lucky to have such a good mum.
Remember to share your notepad with them, even if they're all like, "mom, your bash usage is like from the '90s, so cringe!" Behind all the fuss, they're still learning from you.
I use obsidian to make notes of how to install and setup applications from a fresh install, for example to install mariadb-libs when I install digikam so that I can use the mariadb database on my nas, and the way to mount my nas shares in fstab
Try a different shell, like fish or zsh, maybe. Something with really intense command auto-completion and history.
I personally use fish, it is amazing for this kind of thing.
ETA: also read up on rc files for whatever shell you are using. Creating aliases and functions based on what you do all the time is essential IMO.
it's a good os. on the other hand everytime i learned anything in windows it would get invalidated by new ux and new bugs...
Wait, you guys are getting better? /j
im still stuck in vi hell... help... cannot exit program
Have you tried standing up from your computer and going outside? It's the only 100% reliable way I've found to exit vim.
That's why you install Emacs and never look back. Everything you need in one program. No need to exit at all.
I think there's even an editor in there, at least one of the old greybeards at work said something to that effect.
There is, I'm pretty sure of it. But, I can't remember where?!
There's no exiting vi, gotta buy a new computer
You'll get to the point where you can't use windows anymore XD
I had to troubleshoot some windows problems for family a bit back, and it was the worst x3
That's why sausages are better than Linux: you can start using them on a professional level right from the start. And as a bonus sausages don't use Nvidia!