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Conventions Used in This Handbook
We leave it as understood that when you enter a shell command, you press RETURN at the end. RETURN is labeled ENTER on some keyboards.
Characters called CTRL-X, where X is any letter, are entered by holding down the CTRL (or CTL, or CONTROL) key and pressing that letter. Although we give the letter in uppercase, you can press the letter without the SHIFT key.
Other special characters are LINEFEED (which is the same as CTRL-J), BACKSPACE (same as CTRL-H), ESC, TAB, and DEL (sometimes labeled DELETE or RUBOUT).
This book uses the following font conventions:
Italic
Bold
Used for bash built-in commands, aliases, variables, and options, as well as command lines when they are within regular text. Bold is used for all elements typed in by the user within regular text.Constant Width
Used in examples to show the contents of files or the output from commands.Constant Bold
Used in examples to show interaction between the user and the shell; any text the user types in is shown in Constant Bold. For example:$ pwd/home/cam/adventure/carrol $Constant Italic
Used in displayed command lines for dummy parameters that should be replaced with an actual value.Square Brackets
Used in Chapter 2 to show the position of the cursor on the command line being edited. For example:grep -l Alice < ~cam/book/[a]iwWe use UNIX as a shorthand for "UNIX and Linux." Purists will correctly insist that Linux is not UNIX—but as far as this book is concerned, they behave identically.请支持我们,让我们可以支付服务器费用。
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