352 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
352 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4206
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Title: HPR4206: New to GNU/Linux resources.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4206/hpr4206.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:23:21
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4200 and 6 from Monday the 16th of September 2024.
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Today's show is entitled New to New Linux Resources.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 28 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Scotty talks about resources for new Linux users.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host, some guy on the internet.
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Today I want to be talking to you guys about two resources that I think are just excellent
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for new to Linux users.
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Now new to Linux, how I'm using it here does not mean new to computers.
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If you're new to computers, I am not equipped to assist you.
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The people I have in mind here are, people who may have built their own PC, their Windows
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users or maybe even Mac users, have been using computers for a long time, they're not afraid
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to tinker with their systems.
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And maybe due to frustration of their current system, you know, Windows 10, remember when
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Windows 8 switched to Windows 10, the frustration that caused, that's one of the reasons why
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I came to Linux just terrible.
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Same thing now, Windows 10 going to Windows 11, then I'm trying to build in language models
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directly into the operating system, just, I mean blatantly making clear that they're
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going to drill down and spy on every single aspect of what you the user has, again, I'm
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going to untangle.
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Let me not for whatever reason, for whatever reason you may have for wanting to try Linux.
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I feel like the people who are willing to go get a thumb drive, grab a piece of software
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that allows them to make that thumb drive into a bootable media and then try out or install
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a different operating system, you know, a completely new environment.
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Those people are ready for everything I'm going to introduce here today.
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So kid gloves are off, we will be talking about terminal resources as well, I recommend
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the terminal for new to Linux users, I understand that some others that speak about new to
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Linux users, they recommend things like Ubuntu as a operating system and then they'll include
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with that how you do not necessarily need to use the terminal whenever using Ubuntu.
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I'm going to skip that 100% because you came to Linux for a reason, you understand,
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you came to the links because you either felt for me, I did not feel like I was the administrator
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of my own computer, right, I built my computer, I feel like I, I provide the warranty, I
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provide the guarantee, I provide the final say so, but for whatever reason Microsoft took
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all of that away from me.
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So I came to Linux to get that back, the final say so, and I'm willing to put in work
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to have that, I believe the same of you, and I'm going to treat you like that.
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So I'm going to give you some resources that will help you feel like you have the final
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say so, first up, the Linux command line where it all begins, I definitely recommend this
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as your first resource when learning Linux because the command line is super powerful
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and this is going to teach you how to safely navigate and maneuver using the command line.
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So we're going to start off with the simplest thing like what is the shell, your terminal
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emulators, right, very, very basic stuff.
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Before you know it, you're going to be navigating around, you know, CDing around, changing
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directories all the way up to manipulating files, copying and removing files and things
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of that nature all in a safe environment.
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So you don't have to worry about doing this with your own files where you might accidentally
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delete and remove something important.
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Again, it teaches you how to do it in a very safe way.
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Another thing about this resource, it doesn't bog you down with a lot of the internet arguments.
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Sometimes when seeking information online, users may be a bit more passionate about the
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software that they're using and the insert certain biases with the information that
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they provide.
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This will usually start some kind of an argument and the user asking a question attempting
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to learn does not benefit from any of the argument.
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So for me personally, I like books and documentation as a distraction free environment for learning.
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Another good thing about this resource is not just for the new users, like I've been
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using Linux for a little while now, and I love coming back to read this document again.
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It's a wonderful reference.
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So even after you feel as though you know what you're doing and you can use the terminal
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daily to get most of your work done, you'll still love having this book just to, you
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know, hop back in there, refresh yourself.
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Maybe there's some terms and things you don't really remember because you hadn't used
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them in a while.
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You could just hop right back in here and refresh yourself without going online because
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it's an offline document as well.
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There's no DRM, no ads, no subscriptions and all kinds of stuff.
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I bought the book a few times because I buy humble bundles and this book was a part of
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multiple humble bundles that I've purchased in the past.
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So I've already paid for it multiple times.
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But it is available as a at no cost to you download online link in the show notes.
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Now for just a few quick mentions about the book before going forward.
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This is based on my own experience, but file permissions is something that I believe
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you really, really need to spend some time on for security sake.
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And just because if you, you can sometimes create headaches for yourself when working
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in different directories owned by other users, you may get confused as to why, why things
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are not happening as you believe they should file permissions is just a wonderful thing to
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keep in mind.
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So the book does an excellent job helping you understand file permissions, giving you
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lots, it's motorcycle season.
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So I apologize for all of the noise you can hear out there.
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I got the door and the windows open, letting some of the wonderful fresh air in.
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So along with the fresh air, there's going to be a bit of the environment as I was saying,
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the permissions section of the book does an excellent job.
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It gives you just enough information to help you understand how permissions work.
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What all the symbols mean, you know, you'll see our WX and you'll see it multiple times
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along side certain files whenever you do an LS with the long flag followed by something
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like the A flag or whatever, it'll fill in all the blanks for you.
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I believe the book also does a really good job explaining quoting.
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So with time, if you decide to embark in bash scripting, you will have questions about
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quoting, double quotes, single quotes, that kind of thing.
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The book does an excellent job sort of introducing you to it, but time and experimentation will
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help fill in the rest of the gaps.
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Now for a couple of cons really quickly.
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The book does introduce you to RegX, which is great.
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If you don't know what RegX is, it's pattern matching.
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You're looking for a pattern and you may wish to either remove that pattern or substitute
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it with a different pattern.
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So changing A, B, C with D, F. Funny story about that.
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When I joined open source and started reading a lot of the online documentation scattered
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all over the web, a lot of examples use something called Foo and Bar.
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And I thought these were some sort of system variables that were like super important because
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my experience with the word Foo bar, it was spelled differently and it had a meaning
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that I will not mention here.
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I had no idea that they were, what they were doing with their version of Foo, which is
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Foo and Bar, B-A-R, but yeah, in open source, because there is no sort of company behind
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a lot of it.
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At times you will learn that there's no adult in the room.
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I'll just tell you that from now.
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So there are certain projects out there that may be great projects, but they have names
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that are just not for everyone.
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So I'll also create issues because, say for instance, right now if I ask you to spell
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engine X, what you might spell will be completely different from the package engine X.
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There's a lot of play on words, so documentation means a lot.
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You're going to get a lot of correct pronunciation and spelling of these different packages because
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having someone just tell you, hey, yeah, I use engine X, you're going to go actually running
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out there, type in what you know of as an English speaker, engine and X, and it's not going
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to be what you think it is.
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Another thing about that for me, when I was on Reddit looking for different communities,
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especially adding all of the different desktop environments, that's another thing in Linux,
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they're going to eventually come across.
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This is an interesting one.
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I was adding the different ones, so X, F, C, E, I, at the time, I called X, F, C, E, X,
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face.
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So I didn't know that it was just called X, F, C, E, to me, it looks like the word X and
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face.
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And then, you know, KDE and all the other ones, I'm adding them to my Reddit logs, so
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I can follow the projects, see what users are saying about the different desktop environments.
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And I was trying to find Cinnamon, because at the time I was using Linux meant with the
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Cinnamon Desktop environment, well on Reddit, there is another community called Cinnamon,
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and it is not the Cinnamon Desktop environment.
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I'm going to give you a warning about that right now.
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If you are looking for the Cinnamon Desktop environment, you have to type Cinnamon, DE, for
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Cinnamon Desktop environment, yeah.
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So someone else already had to name Cinnamon, it is a 18 plus community, not say for work,
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giving you a heads up about that now, and if you want to start, you know, joining the
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different communities again, you just got to be careful with spelling and open source
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and other things.
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But back to Rejects, a lot of people have a hard time wrapping their head around Rejects,
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because when you get to using it, depending on the technology that you're using, GRIP,
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SAID, ARC, the different languages that implement their own versions of Rejects, wrapping your
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head around it can be difficult, because a lot of times you're going to have to put your
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own understanding aside and adopt the understanding of the tool that you're using, and you're going
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to have to be able to toggle that, you know, turn it on and off based on what you're
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doing at the time.
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And that's where the difficulty will come in.
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In the book, what I do not appreciate as much is that they use examples that are kind
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of just, you know, this is, this is kind of when, when you're learning from in, from a
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gray beard in the Linux community, they accidentally introduce confusion in the learning process.
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So for instance, they're teaching you about SAID and using Rejects with SAID.
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A good thing to do that with is just plain English, like some regular writing or something,
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you can just, you know, do substitutions on writing.
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And if you want to do anything that's kind of formatted, XML would be a little bit easier
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to work with.
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But just basic writing or work just fine.
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I would even say mark down, even though people may not recognize the formatting as mark
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down, just regular bullet pointing or whatever, that's a lot easier to build your examples
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around because when I came in open source, I didn't know what mark down was, it didn't
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take me long to find out.
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And then adopting it also didn't take too long, you know, just for regular vanilla mark
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down, now when you want to start doing complicated things, like setting up table tables and
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things of that nature, and you start dealing with the different flavors of mark down, you
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know, you can, you can spend some time on it if you'd like, but it's still not a difficult
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thing to understand.
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Regardless, they decided to use something called graph and in variance of graph, which
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are like spin offs of raw off and when you're learning, you know, in Linux, you're going
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to find out that some of the learning resources introduced complexities that are just beyond
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what a new to Linux user should have in front of them at the time.
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So you now have to research what the heck is a graph so that you can understand the
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syntax that you're looking at and separate it from the syntax that you're attempting
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to learn.
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So you're going to be constantly peeling back the onion, attempting to separate the graph
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from the, from the said, and how all of this ties in with you learning Linux, you know,
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it, for me, in my own learning journey, I considered this to be a bad example using a
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graph with said, it was, it was not well done in my opinion.
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One other thing that I'll mention about the book before we move on to the next resource,
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the book, they spelled them wrong when, yeah, you know, them is, it's, it's a text editor
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called them V I M. And for some reason, they ended up spelling it in a N O. I don't know
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what was that with that, but, you know, wink, wink, all right, all right, enough fooling
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around.
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That was a joke, by the way, if you're new and you're listening to this, I'm joking.
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Nano is a perfectly good text editor.
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And a lot of people start out using it because it really does remove a lot of mystery.
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I'm not going to say complexity because none of the text editors that I have used in
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the terminal, you know, them nano micro, they, they were not complex, however, because
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you need to stop and learn what you're doing before you touch them, except for nano nano
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is a little bit easier.
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You can actually just play around in an old before you do a lot because the controls are
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kind of listed at the bottom of the screen.
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And if you're not new to computers, like if you're a savvy Windows user, I was going to
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give some examples there, but there's no need.
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You'll figure it out.
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It's, it's very simple stuff.
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And again, documentation is king for everything.
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Whenever someone recommends a new project, the very first thing you need to do is ask about
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the documentation.
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If they start holding, humming, hand waving about the documentation, skip it, just forget
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about it.
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All right.
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Or if they try to tell you, here is a list of different forms that you can dance around
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trying to build your understanding, forget about it.
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Most projects today do have decent documentation.
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The word get may arrive in front of you at some point.
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I'm going to avoid it here.
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And if there is someone with far better understanding on get and can actually recommend it, I would
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greatly appreciate it.
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I have some books on it.
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I mess around with it, but I cannot in any way give justice to the project in recommendations.
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So I'll leave that up for my betters.
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I'll leave that up to my betters to recommend that project.
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I can't possibly do you any justice by recommending it.
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All right.
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Now, for the next resource that I want to bring to the table, it's a specific man page.
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It's the bash man page.
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Now understand, you may not know a lot about the man pages and looking at them.
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At first, the man pages are not going to make a lot of sense to you.
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If I could put in the words my own confusion, it felt like the man pages were just a high
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elevation top down reference for the creators of whatever technology you a new Linux user
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are attempting to learn.
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So in many cases, it felt like it did you no justice to even look at a man page because
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it only benefited the creator of said technology.
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The reason why I'm recommending the bash man page here, when I learned bash or when I began
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because I don't think the learning ever stopped freely, but when I began to learn bash,
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I learned from a bunch of scattered online forms, documents, videos, just people all over
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the internet and I appreciate them all for what they've taught me.
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However, my growth was always stunted in that most of the examples and things that I come
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across did not include show grammar and the show grammar gives you depth in your learning.
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So you may learn how to mimic a certain process, for instance, in the F statement.
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If you're already a developer, F statements are probably not going to be that difficult
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for you.
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However, if you're new to Linux and you're not already a developer and you really do want
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to use the terminal, you know, you're eventually going to find fascination in bash scripts and
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there's something called an F statement.
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If this thing is true, then do something for me.
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That's the base, basics of it.
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Shell grammar is going to introduce things like definitions.
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You're going to learn that in the shell word means something, name means something.
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You're going to learn about things like control operators and you see when you're on these
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forms, they may demonstrate how to use a control operator, but they never tell you what
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it is, like what it's called.
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So when you're trying to explain your confusion, because you're basically just mimicking what
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you saw someone else do with a control operator, but you can't tell a more knowledgeable individual
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about your confusion, because so much of the depth is lost through these tutorials that
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you're going to encounter, you're going to be able to understand arithmetic evaluation
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through expressions, as well as conditional expressions.
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That's another big one right there, like, you know, especially me bringing up F statements
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and things of that nature, again, understanding the shell grammar and the definitions behind
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each of these different terms will benefit you greatly.
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It'll take some time, obviously, you know, you're learning something new that doesn't immediately
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make it difficult.
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It makes it tedious at times, but if you're interested in learning, I think this is going
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to be just a very, very valuable resource for you, the bash man page.
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And there's another one I'm not going to bring it up here, or maybe I should, because
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I don't like the tease, but it's the bash built ends.
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They don't have an online for it, but if you tighten the same way you do man bash in
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your terminal to pull up the bash man page, man stands for manual, by the way, you can
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do man built ends.
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That's all one word built ends plural built ends.
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You can do a tab complete once you type built and it'll you can hit tab and it'll complete
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the rest of the word.
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So that way you are doing that with a syntax error.
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This is going to help you also understand that there are certain tools that bash your
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shell comes equipped with that are different from your system.
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And you'll find that your system also comes with some of the same tools and you can, you
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can depend if you want to switch between the tools.
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So a good example of that is in bash, they have a built-in echo that you can use and your
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system also comes with echo, which is located if you're using an Ubuntu based system.
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It's going to be in your USR bin bash or not bash, excuse me, USR bin is the directory
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in the root directory.
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You're going to find echo down in there as a binary, but it's also a bash built in as
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well.
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By learning these differences, right, you're going to be, you're going to really fill in
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a lot of gaps.
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Expansion is another big one.
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I mentioned quoting earlier from the Linux command line, when you're dealing with expansion
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and quoting, if you're new to Linux right now, hearing me just say expansion doesn't mean
|
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|
|
anything to you.
|
||
|
|
And I'm not going to attempt to give you some half-witted explanation of it.
|
||
|
|
I would much rather you read the resource, go to the bash, man page, that's where you
|
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|
|
need to get your understanding from.
|
||
|
|
And then from there, ask questions, right, because that's another thing about the community.
|
||
|
|
And you mention that you are reading the man page and you still have questions and you
|
||
|
|
are able to express yourself a little clear using the language or the grammar of the
|
||
|
|
shell or whatever technology that you're using.
|
||
|
|
People are more willing to help you because they can see that you're also trying to help
|
||
|
|
yourself.
|
||
|
|
But if you're just sure, hey, how do I do a thing?
|
||
|
|
Well, it's not going to work out well for you all the time.
|
||
|
|
Some people will try to help you, but you may not be well received.
|
||
|
|
Finally, a fun one that I enjoy using all the time.
|
||
|
|
Job control.
|
||
|
|
Oh, man.
|
||
|
|
Once you become a little bit more fluent in using Linux systems, job control is great.
|
||
|
|
Because, for instance, I use tar from my backup solution.
|
||
|
|
So I'll jump in and I'm just giving an example here.
|
||
|
|
I'll have say my shows directory where I create my HPR shows on.
|
||
|
|
Let's just say that's like 50 gigabytes, whereas the shows, right, I'll throw a tar on
|
||
|
|
that baby.
|
||
|
|
And I'm not going to wait for tar to completely archive that 50 gigabytes, right?
|
||
|
|
So with job control, I can send that job to the background while I continue reading
|
||
|
|
my notes or doing whatever I'm doing and say a them session or whatever.
|
||
|
|
And as another example here as well, let's say, for instance, I accidentally tarred
|
||
|
|
the wrong directory, right?
|
||
|
|
Maybe I made some changes, but those changes were in a sub directory somewhere.
|
||
|
|
And that's the directory I actually should have used tar on, not the parent directory.
|
||
|
|
Well, I could have a choice here.
|
||
|
|
I could kill the current job, you know, the first tar job that I set up there.
|
||
|
|
I could kill that and then start a new one or, you know what?
|
||
|
|
It's not going to hurt anything.
|
||
|
|
I'll leave that running and then just start a new tar job, send it to the background
|
||
|
|
as well.
|
||
|
|
So they'll all be running consecutively.
|
||
|
|
And I'll be there just, you know, again, still reading my notes, documentation, whatever
|
||
|
|
in them while both of those tar jobs are running in the background.
|
||
|
|
And I don't need multiple terminals all over the, but you're going to eventually run
|
||
|
|
into Unix porn or you'll be on YouTube and you'll see people using things like tolling
|
||
|
|
window managers.
|
||
|
|
And they'll have like five or six terminals scattered all over the screen, demonstrating
|
||
|
|
the flexibility of a tiling window manager.
|
||
|
|
The first thing I'm going to tell you is learn how to manage your jobs.
|
||
|
|
All you really need is one terminal window open when you know how to manage your jobs.
|
||
|
|
One window open and full screen and a few jobs in the background.
|
||
|
|
Why do I need multiple of them scattered all over the screen?
|
||
|
|
But when I need to go back and check on a job, I can.
|
||
|
|
But it depends on how you like to work as well.
|
||
|
|
So I don't, I don't mean to speak light of those other tools.
|
||
|
|
They're great tools and they may benefit you more than I could possibly understand.
|
||
|
|
I'm just giving you examples of what is possible.
|
||
|
|
So that's all I'm going to leave you with now.
|
||
|
|
Just those two resources.
|
||
|
|
The book known as the Linux command line and the bash man page.
|
||
|
|
If you use those two, you know, because I do believe in documentation and I think these
|
||
|
|
two will be great for a new to Linux users documentation.
|
||
|
|
That's all I have time for.
|
||
|
|
I'll catch you guys in the next show.
|
||
|
|
Take it easy.
|
||
|
|
You have been listening to Hecker Public Radio at HeckerPublicRadio.org.
|
||
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
||
|
|
If you ever thought of recording podcasts, you click on our contribute link to find out
|
||
|
|
how easy it really is.
|
||
|
|
Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and
|
||
|
|
our sings.net.
|
||
|
|
On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
|
||
|
|
License.
|