This document provides descriptions of common Linux commands organized into categories including file manipulation, text processing, documentation, editors, file and directory management, file display and printing, programming tools, communications, process control, status information, and web commands. It describes what each command is used for and provides examples of some commonly used commands and their functions.
This document provides an A-Z index of common Linux bash commands and their brief descriptions. It lists over 150 commands, their purposes, and additional resources for bash commands. The commands range from basic file management like cp, mv, rm and ls to process management like top, kill and jobs to networking commands like ping, traceroute and ssh. It also indicates which commands are bash built-ins and notes that many commands are available on other shells besides bash.
This document lists Linux commands and provides a brief description of their functions. Some key commands include:
- ls lists information about files and directories
- cd changes the current directory
- cp copies files
- mv moves or renames files
- rm removes files
- grep searches files for lines that match a pattern
This document provides an A-Z index of commands for the Apple OS X command line, listing over 200 commands and their brief descriptions. It includes basic commands for file management, text processing, networking, system administration, and more. The document also notes that bash is the default shell for OS X and that many commands are built-in bash commands.
This document provides an overview of basic Linux commands for navigation, listing directories, reading and manipulating files. It explains commands like pwd, cd, ls, cat, cp, mv, rm, mkdir to change directories, list files, read files, copy, move and delete files/directories. It also introduces the vi editor for creating new files and mentions some other miscellaneous commands like date, chmod, user management tools.
This document provides a reference sheet for common UNIX/Linux commands organized into categories such as file commands, process management, permissions, searching, compression and more. It lists basic commands for manipulating files, running processes, setting permissions on files and directories, searching for files and text, compressing files, version control, getting system information and shortcuts.
This document provides a tutorial on Unix/Linux. It begins with an overview of the Unix system including the kernel, shell, multi-user and multi-process capabilities, and important directory structures. It then covers basic commands, relative and absolute paths, redirecting and piping output, permissions, process management, installing software, text editors, running jobs in the foreground and background, and remote login/file transfer. The goal is to introduce fundamental Unix concepts and commands to new users.
This document provides a quick reference to useful UNIX commands organized into categories such as file commands, directory commands, symbolic links, terminal commands, help commands, and more. It includes brief descriptions and usage examples for commands like ls, cd, cp, grep, find, and others. The document is intended as a quick reference and not a replacement for manuals or books on UNIX. It recommends Unix in a Nutshell as a reference.
This document provides a list of common Linux commands along with brief descriptions of their functions. It includes commands for manipulating files, running programs, managing processes, networking, installing software, and more. The list spans from a to z and covers over 150 different commands that can be used in a Linux terminal.
This document provides an A-Z index of common Linux bash commands and their brief descriptions. It lists over 150 commands, their purposes, and additional resources for bash commands. The commands range from basic file management like cp, mv, rm and ls to process management like top, kill and jobs to networking commands like ping, traceroute and ssh. It also indicates which commands are bash built-ins and notes that many commands are available on other shells besides bash.
This document lists Linux commands and provides a brief description of their functions. Some key commands include:
- ls lists information about files and directories
- cd changes the current directory
- cp copies files
- mv moves or renames files
- rm removes files
- grep searches files for lines that match a pattern
This document provides an A-Z index of commands for the Apple OS X command line, listing over 200 commands and their brief descriptions. It includes basic commands for file management, text processing, networking, system administration, and more. The document also notes that bash is the default shell for OS X and that many commands are built-in bash commands.
This document provides an overview of basic Linux commands for navigation, listing directories, reading and manipulating files. It explains commands like pwd, cd, ls, cat, cp, mv, rm, mkdir to change directories, list files, read files, copy, move and delete files/directories. It also introduces the vi editor for creating new files and mentions some other miscellaneous commands like date, chmod, user management tools.
This document provides a reference sheet for common UNIX/Linux commands organized into categories such as file commands, process management, permissions, searching, compression and more. It lists basic commands for manipulating files, running processes, setting permissions on files and directories, searching for files and text, compressing files, version control, getting system information and shortcuts.
This document provides a tutorial on Unix/Linux. It begins with an overview of the Unix system including the kernel, shell, multi-user and multi-process capabilities, and important directory structures. It then covers basic commands, relative and absolute paths, redirecting and piping output, permissions, process management, installing software, text editors, running jobs in the foreground and background, and remote login/file transfer. The goal is to introduce fundamental Unix concepts and commands to new users.
This document provides a quick reference to useful UNIX commands organized into categories such as file commands, directory commands, symbolic links, terminal commands, help commands, and more. It includes brief descriptions and usage examples for commands like ls, cd, cp, grep, find, and others. The document is intended as a quick reference and not a replacement for manuals or books on UNIX. It recommends Unix in a Nutshell as a reference.
This document provides a list of common Linux commands along with brief descriptions of their functions. It includes commands for manipulating files, running programs, managing processes, networking, installing software, and more. The list spans from a to z and covers over 150 different commands that can be used in a Linux terminal.
This document provides a list of commands and their descriptions used to automate the build process. The commands have two letter abbreviations followed by their full name and a short description. The commands can be run individually or together when separated by slashes. The commands were written using shell script with perl command line file processing.
This document contains a list of common Linux commands and their brief descriptions. It includes commands for managing files, directories, users, processes, networking, installing software, editing text, and more. The list spans from a to z and contains over 100 commands in total that cover many essential tasks in Linux systems.
This document provides an A-Z index of common Linux bash commands and their brief descriptions. It lists over 150 commands, such as alias to create an alias, apt-get to install software packages, cat to concatenate files, chmod to change file permissions, cp to copy files, date to display or change the system date and time, df to display disk space, grep to search files for patterns, ls to list files, mv to move or rename files, rm to remove files, and pwd to print the working directory.
This document lists and briefly describes many common Linux terminal commands starting with the letters A through X. It includes basic commands for navigating files and directories, manipulating text, installing and managing software packages, networking tasks, and more. Some of the commands described are apt-get, cd, cp, grep, ls, man, mkdir, mv, ping, rm, tar, top, and vi.
This document provides an overview of basic Unix commands including ls, cd, pwd, mkdir, rm, rmdir, cp, find, touch, echo, cat, who, and du. It explains what each command is used for and provides examples of common usages. The document serves as a beginner's guide to learning Unix commands.
This document provides an overview of basic Unix commands, including:
- Commands for navigating directories (cd, pwd, ls), creating/removing directories and files (mkdir, rmdir, cp, rm)
- Commands for viewing file contents (cat, more, less) and comparing files (diff)
- Commands for searching files (grep) and counting elements (wc)
- Commands for changing file permissions (chmod) and moving/renaming files (mv)
It also briefly describes shells, files and pathnames in Unix systems. The document is intended as an introduction for new Unix users to understand basic file management and navigation.
1. The document provides examples of common Linux commands and their usage including tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, export, xargs, ls, ifconfig, uname, ps, free, top, df, kill, rm, cp, mv, cat, mount, chmod, chown, passwd, mkdir, ifconfig, uname, whereis, whatis, and locate.
2. Examples shown include how to create, extract, and view tar archives, search files with grep, find files, login remotely with ssh, edit files with vim, compare files with diff, view processes with ps, check storage usage with df, terminate processes with kill, manage files
we need to have a good amount of basic or in-depth knowledge on Linux Basics. This will help one's job easy in resolving the issues and supporting the projects.
Are you a system admin or database admin? Or working on any other technology which is deployed or implemented on linux/UNIX machines? Then you should be good with Linux basic concepts and commands. We will cover this section very clearly.
Linux Commands mentioned here includes basic as well advanced linux commands which we use on a daily basis. These commands can also help you to crack interview.
This document provides an index of 21 coding topics that include performing arithmetic operations, comparison of numbers, compound interest calculation, prime number checking, and palindrome checking. It also includes displaying a Fibonacci series, calculating simple interest, and swapping numbers without using three variables. The index provides the topic name and number for each item.
This document provides an overview of the Unix operating system and some basic Unix commands. It discusses the kernel and shell architecture of Unix, the multi-user and multi-process capabilities, file and directory structures including important directories like /bin, /home, and /var. It also summarizes common commands for navigating directories, viewing files, copying/moving files, and managing permissions and processes. The document is intended to help users get started with basic Unix concepts and commands.
This Operating System lab manual is designed strictly according to BPUT Syllabus.Any suggestions or comments are well come at neelamani.samal@gmail.com
Linux is an open-source operating system that can run on various hardware. The document discusses various Linux commands and concepts related to directories, files, permissions, users, groups, text editors like vi and vim, process management, disk partitioning and more. It also covers Linux installation, package management, shell scripting and configuring network and services like SSH, web servers and more. Exercises are included to help understand concepts like mount points, journaling and file attributes.
SGN Introduction to UNIX Command-line 2015 part 1solgenomics
ย
This document provides an introduction to UNIX commands presented at a workshop on March 17, 2015. It covers navigating file systems, wildcards and shortcuts, file permissions, compression and networking commands, text file manipulation, command line pipelines, and an introduction to bash scripts. The document explains that most biological data analysis software uses UNIX command lines, data analysis on servers is faster, and NGS files require command line tools due to their large size.
This document provides an introduction and overview of Linux commands and Perl basics. It discusses key Linux commands for system information, user management, files/directories, permissions, processes, networking and more. It also covers Perl data types, variables, input/output, strings, arithmetic, comparisons, functions and file handling. The document aims to teach Linux commands and Perl programming basics.
This document provides 50 examples of common Linux/Unix commands along with brief explanations and usage examples for each command. Some of the commands highlighted include tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, and ls. The examples cover a wide range of tasks from compressing/extracting files to searching/editing text to managing processes and permissions.
The document provides descriptions of Linux commands including their purpose, syntax, and usage. It covers common commands like bc, cal, cat, cd, cp, date, echo, grep, id, last, lastlog, ls, man, mkdir, mv, pwd, rm, rmdir, sort, shutdown, who, whois, more, less, clear, cmp, wc, whoami, head, and tail. For each command, it lists the command name, brief description, and syntax.
P2Cinfotech is one of the leading, Online IT Training facilities and Job Consultant, spread all over the world. We have successfully conducted online classes on various Software Technologies that are currently in Demand. To name a few, we provide quality online training for QA, QTP, Manual Testing, HP LoadRunner, BA, Java Technologies.
Unique Features of P2Cinfotech:
1. All online software Training Batches will Be handled by Real time working Professionals only.
2. Live online training like Real time face to face, Instructor ? student interaction.
3. Good online training virtual class room environment.
4. Special Exercises and Assignments to make you self-confident on your course subject.
5. Interactive Sessions to update students with latest Developments on the particular course.
6. Flexible Batch Timings and proper timetable.
7. Affordable, decent and Flexible fee structure.
8. Extended Technical assistance even after completion of the course.
9. 100% Job Assistance and Guidance.
Courses What we cover:
Quality Assurance
Business Analsis
QTp
JAVA
Apps Devlepoment Training
Register for Free DEMO:
www.p2cinfotech.com p2cinfotech@gmail.com +1-732-546-3607 (USA)
This document provides an overview of basic UNIX commands for navigating directories, working with files and permissions, running processes, and compiling programs. It explains how to enter commands and lists some common commands for directories, files, viewing/editing, printing, shells, and compressing/archiving with brief descriptions of their usage.
This document provides instructions and summaries for common UNIX commands used to navigate directories, work with files and folders, edit text, set permissions, manage processes, and compile programs. It includes commands for listing files, moving/copying files, viewing file contents, printing, searching files, and compressing/archiving files. The document also summarizes shell commands, permissions, scripting languages, and compilers available on UNIX systems.
This document provides instructions and summaries for common UNIX commands used to navigate directories, work with files and folders, edit text, set permissions, manage processes, and compile programs. It includes commands for listing files, moving/copying files, viewing file contents, printing, searching files, and compressing/archiving files. The document also summarizes shell commands, permissions, scripting languages, and compilers available on UNIX systems.
This document provides a list of commands and their descriptions used to automate the build process. The commands have two letter abbreviations followed by their full name and a short description. The commands can be run individually or together when separated by slashes. The commands were written using shell script with perl command line file processing.
This document contains a list of common Linux commands and their brief descriptions. It includes commands for managing files, directories, users, processes, networking, installing software, editing text, and more. The list spans from a to z and contains over 100 commands in total that cover many essential tasks in Linux systems.
This document provides an A-Z index of common Linux bash commands and their brief descriptions. It lists over 150 commands, such as alias to create an alias, apt-get to install software packages, cat to concatenate files, chmod to change file permissions, cp to copy files, date to display or change the system date and time, df to display disk space, grep to search files for patterns, ls to list files, mv to move or rename files, rm to remove files, and pwd to print the working directory.
This document lists and briefly describes many common Linux terminal commands starting with the letters A through X. It includes basic commands for navigating files and directories, manipulating text, installing and managing software packages, networking tasks, and more. Some of the commands described are apt-get, cd, cp, grep, ls, man, mkdir, mv, ping, rm, tar, top, and vi.
This document provides an overview of basic Unix commands including ls, cd, pwd, mkdir, rm, rmdir, cp, find, touch, echo, cat, who, and du. It explains what each command is used for and provides examples of common usages. The document serves as a beginner's guide to learning Unix commands.
This document provides an overview of basic Unix commands, including:
- Commands for navigating directories (cd, pwd, ls), creating/removing directories and files (mkdir, rmdir, cp, rm)
- Commands for viewing file contents (cat, more, less) and comparing files (diff)
- Commands for searching files (grep) and counting elements (wc)
- Commands for changing file permissions (chmod) and moving/renaming files (mv)
It also briefly describes shells, files and pathnames in Unix systems. The document is intended as an introduction for new Unix users to understand basic file management and navigation.
1. The document provides examples of common Linux commands and their usage including tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, export, xargs, ls, ifconfig, uname, ps, free, top, df, kill, rm, cp, mv, cat, mount, chmod, chown, passwd, mkdir, ifconfig, uname, whereis, whatis, and locate.
2. Examples shown include how to create, extract, and view tar archives, search files with grep, find files, login remotely with ssh, edit files with vim, compare files with diff, view processes with ps, check storage usage with df, terminate processes with kill, manage files
we need to have a good amount of basic or in-depth knowledge on Linux Basics. This will help one's job easy in resolving the issues and supporting the projects.
Are you a system admin or database admin? Or working on any other technology which is deployed or implemented on linux/UNIX machines? Then you should be good with Linux basic concepts and commands. We will cover this section very clearly.
Linux Commands mentioned here includes basic as well advanced linux commands which we use on a daily basis. These commands can also help you to crack interview.
This document provides an index of 21 coding topics that include performing arithmetic operations, comparison of numbers, compound interest calculation, prime number checking, and palindrome checking. It also includes displaying a Fibonacci series, calculating simple interest, and swapping numbers without using three variables. The index provides the topic name and number for each item.
This document provides an overview of the Unix operating system and some basic Unix commands. It discusses the kernel and shell architecture of Unix, the multi-user and multi-process capabilities, file and directory structures including important directories like /bin, /home, and /var. It also summarizes common commands for navigating directories, viewing files, copying/moving files, and managing permissions and processes. The document is intended to help users get started with basic Unix concepts and commands.
This Operating System lab manual is designed strictly according to BPUT Syllabus.Any suggestions or comments are well come at neelamani.samal@gmail.com
Linux is an open-source operating system that can run on various hardware. The document discusses various Linux commands and concepts related to directories, files, permissions, users, groups, text editors like vi and vim, process management, disk partitioning and more. It also covers Linux installation, package management, shell scripting and configuring network and services like SSH, web servers and more. Exercises are included to help understand concepts like mount points, journaling and file attributes.
SGN Introduction to UNIX Command-line 2015 part 1solgenomics
ย
This document provides an introduction to UNIX commands presented at a workshop on March 17, 2015. It covers navigating file systems, wildcards and shortcuts, file permissions, compression and networking commands, text file manipulation, command line pipelines, and an introduction to bash scripts. The document explains that most biological data analysis software uses UNIX command lines, data analysis on servers is faster, and NGS files require command line tools due to their large size.
This document provides an introduction and overview of Linux commands and Perl basics. It discusses key Linux commands for system information, user management, files/directories, permissions, processes, networking and more. It also covers Perl data types, variables, input/output, strings, arithmetic, comparisons, functions and file handling. The document aims to teach Linux commands and Perl programming basics.
This document provides 50 examples of common Linux/Unix commands along with brief explanations and usage examples for each command. Some of the commands highlighted include tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, and ls. The examples cover a wide range of tasks from compressing/extracting files to searching/editing text to managing processes and permissions.
The document provides descriptions of Linux commands including their purpose, syntax, and usage. It covers common commands like bc, cal, cat, cd, cp, date, echo, grep, id, last, lastlog, ls, man, mkdir, mv, pwd, rm, rmdir, sort, shutdown, who, whois, more, less, clear, cmp, wc, whoami, head, and tail. For each command, it lists the command name, brief description, and syntax.
P2Cinfotech is one of the leading, Online IT Training facilities and Job Consultant, spread all over the world. We have successfully conducted online classes on various Software Technologies that are currently in Demand. To name a few, we provide quality online training for QA, QTP, Manual Testing, HP LoadRunner, BA, Java Technologies.
Unique Features of P2Cinfotech:
1. All online software Training Batches will Be handled by Real time working Professionals only.
2. Live online training like Real time face to face, Instructor ? student interaction.
3. Good online training virtual class room environment.
4. Special Exercises and Assignments to make you self-confident on your course subject.
5. Interactive Sessions to update students with latest Developments on the particular course.
6. Flexible Batch Timings and proper timetable.
7. Affordable, decent and Flexible fee structure.
8. Extended Technical assistance even after completion of the course.
9. 100% Job Assistance and Guidance.
Courses What we cover:
Quality Assurance
Business Analsis
QTp
JAVA
Apps Devlepoment Training
Register for Free DEMO:
www.p2cinfotech.com p2cinfotech@gmail.com +1-732-546-3607 (USA)
This document provides an overview of basic UNIX commands for navigating directories, working with files and permissions, running processes, and compiling programs. It explains how to enter commands and lists some common commands for directories, files, viewing/editing, printing, shells, and compressing/archiving with brief descriptions of their usage.
This document provides instructions and summaries for common UNIX commands used to navigate directories, work with files and folders, edit text, set permissions, manage processes, and compile programs. It includes commands for listing files, moving/copying files, viewing file contents, printing, searching files, and compressing/archiving files. The document also summarizes shell commands, permissions, scripting languages, and compilers available on UNIX systems.
This document provides instructions and summaries for common UNIX commands used to navigate directories, work with files and folders, edit text, set permissions, manage processes, and compile programs. It includes commands for listing files, moving/copying files, viewing file contents, printing, searching files, and compressing/archiving files. The document also summarizes shell commands, permissions, scripting languages, and compilers available on UNIX systems.
This document lists Linux commands and provides a brief description of their functions. Some key commands include:
- ls lists information about files
- cd changes the current directory
- cp copies files
- mv moves or renames files
- rm removes files
- grep searches files for lines matching a pattern
- man displays manual pages for commands
Quick guide of the most common linux commandsCarlos Enrique
ย
This document provides a quick guide to the most common Linux commands organized in alphabetical order. It lists over 100 commands and briefly describes the basic function of each one such as manipulating files and directories, running processes, viewing system information, and more.
The document provides an A-Z index of common Linux bash commands and their brief descriptions. Some key commands include:
- adduser and addgroup to add users and groups
- alias to create command aliases
- apt-get and aptitude to install software packages
- bash for the GNU Bourne Again shell
- cat and more to view file contents
- cd to change directories
- cp to copy files
- grep to search files for patterns
- ls to list directory contents
- mkdir to create directories
- rm to remove files
- sudo to run commands as root
- tar to archive and compress files
This document provides a summary of Linux command line cheat sheet covering topics such as:
- Simple commands like date, cal, df, free for displaying system information
- Navigation commands like cd, ls
- Exploring and manipulating files and directories using commands like cp, mv, mkdir, rm
- Finding files using locate, find
- Process commands like ps, top, kill
- Networking commands like ping, traceroute, netstat
- Archiving files using gzip, bzip2, tar, zip
- User permissions and ownership with chmod, chown, su
Linux is an open-source operating system based on Unix, designed for multi-user environments. The document provides an overview of basic Linux commands like ls, mkdir, cd for navigating files and directories, as well as more advanced commands for manipulating files, checking system resources, and getting system information. It also lists and describes many common Linux commands and their functions.
This document provides an introduction to the GNU/Linux command line interface for beginners. It outlines the file system hierarchy, describes commands for navigation and help, managing files and directories, dealing with file contents, and getting system information. The commands covered include ls, cd, pwd, man, mkdir, touch, rm, cp, mv, cat, file, head, tail, grep, less, free, date, uptime, df, du, whoami, apt-get, and passwd. The document was created by Ahmed El-Mekkawy and Mohammed El-Sayed of the EGLUG Team.
This document provides instructions for 27 common Linux commands: mkdir, rmdir, ls, cd, cat, touch, wc, who, pwd, rm, mv, chmod, cp, grep, cal, date, vi, tput, ps, export, type, tail, sudo, head, man, clear, and adduser. For each command, it lists the syntax and provides 1-3 examples of common uses. The document is presented over 28 pages with the commands organized topic-by-topic and includes formatting like headings and indentation to aid readability.
This document provides an overview and introduction to using Linux for a workshop session. It covers working with files and directories, basic commands, process commands, using the vi editor, and a brief introduction to the nano editor. The document also discusses compiling files, debugging in C/C++, and remote access tools for Linux.
The document provides an overview of the Linux operating system. It discusses key Linux concepts like the kernel, shell, file structure, users and permissions. It also summarizes common Linux commands for file management, editing, users, groups, software installation and services. Key tools covered include vi editor, rpm, tar, useradd/del, service and chkconfig. The document is intended as part of an introductory Linux presentation.
This document provides 50 examples of common Linux/Unix commands organized by command name. It begins with tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, and export examples. The document is intended as a quick reference for users to learn practical uses of fundamental Linux commands.
This document provides 50 examples of common Linux/Unix commands along with brief explanations and usage examples for each command. Some of the commands highlighted include tar, grep, find, ssh, sed, awk, vim, diff, sort, export, xargs, ls, pwd, cd, gzip, bzip2, unzip, shutdown, ftp, crontab, service, ps, top, df, kill, rm, cp, mv, cat, mount, chmod, chown, passwd, mkdir, ifconfig, and uname. The document is intended to give readers a quick start on frequently used commands.
This document provides an overview of various Unix/Linux commands and concepts. It discusses the introduction to Unix including defining an operating system and its functionalities. It describes the evolution and structure of Unix. It covers usage of simple commands like date, who, ls and file commands like cat, cp, mv etc. It explains the Unix file system hierarchy and concepts like input/output redirection and wildcards. It also discusses environmental variables, file permissions and commands related to pipes and filters like sort and grep. Finally, it talks about editors like vi and shell programming concepts.
This document provides an overview of the Linux operating system. It discusses key Linux concepts like the kernel, shell, file system structure, permissions, users and groups. It also summarizes important commands for navigating and managing files, directories, users, software and services in Linux. These include commands like ls, cd, mkdir, chmod, useradd, yum, service and chkconfig. The document outlines the directory structure in Linux and describes important directories like /bin, /home, /etc. It also covers processes, pipes, redirection and Linux file systems & partitions.
Powerful and efficient tool leveraging UNIX commands for streamlined automation, enabling seamless execution of complex tasks and maximizing productivity.
The document provides an overview of common Linux commands, including commands for executing other commands, navigating directories, listing and copying files, managing users and permissions, searching for files, processing text, managing archives, and compressing files. Examples are given for commands like ls, cd, cp, mv, rm, who, echo, alias, awk, chown, diff, grep, pushd, kill, df, cat, tar, gzip, su. Brief descriptions are provided for most commands and references are given at the end for additional Linux resources.
The document summarizes the usage of various Linux commands like cd, bc, man, who, whoami, pwd, mkdir, rmdir, ls, touch, mv, date, cat, more, less, print, echo, lp, rm, cp and their options. It provides the syntax and examples of using each command. The commands covered are for directory navigation, file manipulation, text processing and printing files in Linux operating system.
This document provides a cheat sheet of common Linux commands organized into four categories: Directory Movement, User Management, System Management, and File Management. It lists the command name, a brief description, and examples of commands for navigating directories, adding users, checking system resources, and modifying file permissions and ownership. The document also advertises support services from OpenLogic to assist with CentOS projects.
Cross-Cultural Leadership and CommunicationMattVassar1
ย
Business is done in many different ways across the world. How you connect with colleagues and communicate feedback constructively differs tremendously depending on where a person comes from. Drawing on the culture map from the cultural anthropologist, Erin Meyer, this class discusses how best to manage effectively across the invisible lines of culture.
How to Create User Notification in Odoo 17Celine George
ย
This slide will represent how to create user notification in Odoo 17. Odoo allows us to create and send custom notifications on some events or actions. We have different types of notification such as sticky notification, rainbow man effect, alert and raise exception warning or validation.
Post init hook in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
ย
In Odoo, hooks are functions that are presented as a string in the __init__ file of a module. They are the functions that can execute before and after the existing code.
CapTechTalks Webinar Slides June 2024 Donovan Wright.pptxCapitolTechU
ย
Slides from a Capitol Technology University webinar held June 20, 2024. The webinar featured Dr. Donovan Wright, presenting on the Department of Defense Digital Transformation.
How to Create a Stage or a Pipeline in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
ย
Using CRM module, we can manage and keep track of all new leads and opportunities in one location. It helps to manage your sales pipeline with customizable stages. In this slide letโs discuss how to create a stage or pipeline inside the CRM module in odoo 17.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has revolutionized the creation of images and videos, enabling the generation of highly realistic and imaginative visual content. Utilizing advanced techniques like Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) and neural style transfer, AI can transform simple sketches into detailed artwork or blend various styles into unique visual masterpieces. GANs, in particular, function by pitting two neural networks against each other, resulting in the production of remarkably lifelike images. AI's ability to analyze and learn from vast datasets allows it to create visuals that not only mimic human creativity but also push the boundaries of artistic expression, making it a powerful tool in digital media and entertainment industries.
Information and Communication Technology in EducationMJDuyan
ย
(๐๐๐ ๐๐๐) (๐๐๐ฌ๐ฌ๐จ๐ง 2)-๐๐ซ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐ฆ๐ฌ
๐๐ฑ๐ฉ๐ฅ๐๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐ ๐ข๐ง ๐๐๐ฎ๐๐๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง:
Students will be able to explain the role and impact of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in education. They will understand how ICT tools, such as computers, the internet, and educational software, enhance learning and teaching processes. By exploring various ICT applications, students will recognize how these technologies facilitate access to information, improve communication, support collaboration, and enable personalized learning experiences.
๐๐ข๐ฌ๐๐ฎ๐ฌ๐ฌ ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐ซ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐๐๐ฅ๐ ๐ฌ๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ๐๐๐ฌ ๐จ๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐ข๐ง๐ญ๐๐ซ๐ง๐๐ญ:
-Students will be able to discuss what constitutes reliable sources on the internet. They will learn to identify key characteristics of trustworthy information, such as credibility, accuracy, and authority. By examining different types of online sources, students will develop skills to evaluate the reliability of websites and content, ensuring they can distinguish between reputable information and misinformation.
Information and Communication Technology in Education
ย
Unix commands
1. Command Description
cat Display File Contents
cd ChangesDirectory to dirname
chgrp change filegroup
chmod Changing Permissions
cp Copy source file into destination
file Determine file type
find Find files
grep Search filesfor regular expressions.
head Display first few linesof a file
ln Create softlinkon oldname
ls Display informationabout filetype.
mkdir Create a new directory dirname
more Display data in paginatedform.
mv Move (Rename) a oldnameto newname.
pwd Print current working directory.
rm Remove (Delete) filename
rmdir Delete an existing directory provided it isempty.
tail Printslast few linesin a file.
touch Update access and modification timeof a file.
Manipulating data:
The contentsof filescan be compared andalteredwith the followingcommands.
Command Description
awk Pattern scanning and processing language
cmp Compare the contentsof two files
comm Compare sorted data
cut Cut out selected fieldsof each lineof a file
diff Differential file comparator
expand Expand tabsto spaces
join Join fileson some commonfield
perl Data manipulation language
sed Stream text editor
sort Sort file data
split Split file into smaller files
tr Translate characters
uniq Report repeated linesin a file
wc Count words, lines, and characters
vi Opensvi text editor
2. Misc Commands:
These commands listor alter information aboutthe system:
Command Description
chfn Change your finger information
chgrp Change the group ownership ofa file
chown Change owner
date Print the date
determin Automatically find terminal type
du Print amountof disk usage
echo Echo arguments to the standard options
exit Quit the system
finger Print information aboutlogged-in users
groupadd Create a user group
groups Show group memberships
homequota Show quota and file usage
iostat ReportI/O statistics
kill Send a signal to a process
last Show lastlogins ofusers
logout log off UNIX
lun Listuser names or login ID
netstat Show network status
passwd Change user password
passwd Change your login password
printenv Displayvalue of a shell variable
ps Displaythe status ofcurrent processes
ps Print process status statistics
quota -v Displaydisk usage and limits
reset Resetterminal mode
script Keep scriptof terminal session
script Save the outputof a command or process
setenv Set environmentvariables
stty Set terminal options
time Time a command
3. top Displayall system processes
tset Set terminal mode
tty Print current terminal name
umask Show the permissions thatare given to view files by default
uname Displayname ofthe current system
uptime Get the system up time
useradd Create a user account
users Print names oflogged in users
vmstat Reportvirtual memorystatistics
w Show what logged in users are doing
who Listlogged in users
Access Control
exit - terminate a shell (see "man sh" or
"man csh")
logout - sign off; end session (C shell and
bash shell only;)
passwd - change login password
rlogin - log in remotely to another UNIX
system
ssh - secure shell
slogin - secure version of rlogin
yppasswd - change login password in yellow
pages
Communications
mail - send and receive mail
mesg - permit or deny terminal messages
and talk requests
pine - send and receive mail
talk - talk to another logged-in user
write - write to another logged-in user
Programming Tools
as - assembler, specific to each machine
architecture
awk - pattern scanning and processing
language
Miscellaneous
alias - define synonym commands
chquota - change disk quota on ACITS
UNIX systems
chsh - change default login shell
clear - clear terminal screen
echo - echo arguments
pbm - portable bitmap manipulation
programs
popd - pop the directory stack (C shell only)
pushd - push directory on stack (C shell
only)
script - make typescript of terminal session
setenv - set an environment variable (C
shell only)
stty - set terminal options
News/Networks
netstat - show network status
rsh - run shell or command on another UNIX
system
ssh - secure-shell version of rsh
Process Control
bg - put suspended process into background
fg - bring process into foreground
4. bc - online calculator
cc - C compiler
csh - C shell command interpreter
dbx - source-level debugging program
f77 - Fortran compiler
gdb - GNU Project debugger
gprof - display profile of called routines
kill - kill a process
ld - the UNIX loader
lex - generate lexical analysis programs
lint - check C source code
make - maintain large programs
maple - symbolic mathematics program
math - symbolic mathematics program
nice - run a command at low priority (see
"man nice" or "man csh")
nohup - run a command immune to hangups
pc - Pascal compiler (xlp on ADS)
perl - Popular script interpreter
prof - display profile data
python - Python programming language
sh - Bourne shell command interpreter
yacc - generate input parsing programs
xcalc - graphical calulator under x
Documentation
apropos - locate commands by keyword
lookup
find - locate file (i.e. find . -name *.tex -
print)
info - start the info explorer program
man - find manual information about
commands
whatis - describe what a command is
whereis - locate source, binary, or man
page for a program
Editors
emacs - screen-oriented text editor
pico - screen-oriented text editor (renamed
called nano)
sed - stream-oriented text editor
vi - full-screen text editor
vim - full-screen text editor ("vi-improved")
File and Directory Management
cd - change working directory
chmod - change the protection of a file or
jobs - list processes
^y - suspend process at next input request
^z - suspend current process
Status Information
clock - determine processor time
date - show date and time
df - summarize free disk space
du - summarize disk space used
env - display environment
finger - look up user information
history - list previously issued commands
last - indicate last login of users
lpq - examine spool queue
manpath - show search path for man pages
printenv - print out environment
ps - show process status
pwd - print full pathname of working
directory
set - set shell variables (C shell, bash, or
ksh)
spend - lists year-to-date ACITS UNIX
charges
stty - set terminal options
time - timing programs
top - list top cpu processes
uptime - show system load, how long
system has been up
w - show who is on system, what command
each job is executing
who - show who is logged onto the system
whois - Internet user name directory service
whoami - who owns the shell
Image Processing
gimp - photoshop type image processing
program
xfig - drawing program
xv - image viewer
xvscan - scan picture
xpaint - paint program
kpaint - kde paint program
Sound
mplayer - mpg player
realplay - realaudio player
timidity - midi to wav converter and player
5. directory
chown - change owner (or group) of a file or
directory
chgrp - change group of a file or directory
cmp - compare two files
comm - select/reject lines common to two
sorted files
cp - copy files
crypt - encrypt/decrypt files (CCWF only)
diff - compare the contents of two ASCII
files
file - determine file type
grep - search a file for a pattern
gzip - compress or expand files
ln - make a link to a file
ls - list the contents of a directory
lsof - list of open files
mkdir - create a directory
mv - move or rename files and directories
pwd - show the full pathname of your
working directory
quota - display disk usage and limits
rm - delete (remove) files
rmdir - delete (remove) directories
stat - status of file (i.e. last access)
sync - flush filesystem buffers
sort - sort or merge files
tar - create or extract archives
tee - copy input to standard output and
other files
tr - translate characters
umask - change default file protections
uncompress - restore compressed file
uniq - report (or delete) repeated lines in a
file
wc - count lines, words, and characters in a
file
File Display and Printing
cat - show the contents of a file; catenate
files
fold - fold long lines to fit output device
head - show first few lines of a file
lpq - examine the printer spooling queue
lpr - print a file
lprm - remove jobs from the printer
spooling queue
more - display a file, one screen at a time
less - like more with more features
xmms - mp3 player
Text Processing
abiword - open source word processor
addbib - create or extend bibliographic
database
col - filter reverse line feeds
diction - identify wordy sentences
diffmk - mark differences between files
dvips - convert TeX DVI files into PostScript
explain - explain phrases found by diction
program
grap - pic preprocessor for drawing graphs
hyphen - find hyphenated words
ispell - check spelling interactively
latex - format text in LaTeX (based on TeX)
pdfelatex - latex with pdf output
latex2html - Latex to html
lookbib - find bibliography references
macref - make cross-reference listing of
nroff/troff macro files
ndx - create a subject-page index for a
document
neqn - format mathematics with nroff
nroff - format text for simple display
pic - make simple pictures for troff input
psdit - filter troff output for Apple
LaserWriter
ptx - make permuted index (not on CCWF)
refer - insert references from bibliographic
databases
roffbib - run off bibliographic database
sortbib - sort bibliographic database
spell - find spelling errors
ispell - interactive spell checker
style - analyze surface characteristics of a
document
tbl - format tables for nroff/troff
tex - format text
tpic - convert pic source files into TeX
commands
wget - grab webpage
X windows
grabmode - info on screen: i.e. "1152x864"
51.213kHz/56.59Hz
import - grab window (i.e. import ppm:-
>out.ppm)
6. page - like "more", but prints screens top to
bottom
pr - paginate a file for printing
tail - show the last part of a file
zcat - display a compressed file
xv - show print, manipulate images
gv - show ps and pdf files
xpdf = shopw pdf files (use gv)
File Transfer
ftp - transfer files between network hosts
rsync - fast and flexible sync between
computers
scp - secure version of rcp
xdpyinfo - number of colors
xkill - kill xwindow
xlock - lock screen
xterm - xterminal
xwininfo - information on open window
Web
html2ps - html to ps
latex2html - latex to html translator
lynx - text based webbrowser
netscape - webbrowser
sitecopy - sitecopy is for easily maintaining
remote web sites.
weblint - html sytax and style checker