Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Best way to learn UNIX and shell Programming Post 302552649 by dnam9917 on Monday 5th of September 2011 04:08:10 AM
Old 09-05-2011
Best way to learn UNIX and shell Programming

Guys,

What do you think is the best way to learn UNIX and shell scripting?

** I keep on searching tutorials online, where I loose most of my time Smilie

Let me know the way you learnt the UNIX concepts, your replies might help me learn more.

Thanks a tonSmilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Want To Learn Network Programming

I want to learn Network Programming with C,but I don't know how to start. Thank you. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hubin330
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Programming/Scripting Languages To Learn

Which languages would, in the long run, be best to learn on a UNIX environment for kernel work, every day programs, and overall UNIX programming? I've been learning C for over a year now (which I'm pretty confident with) and decided I want to look into some other languages. I'll mainly be... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tjinr
1 Replies

3. Web Development

What Web Development languages should i learn?

I am learning Web Development, so far i am learning html,xhtml, css, java script.... What I want to know is what other Web Development languages should i learn? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Anna Hussie
1 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

How can I learn computer programming languages on my own?

I would love the idea to develop games. How can I teach myself computer programming? What programs or software must I use? I have the new iMac? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Anna Hussie
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How does unix system administration, unix programming, unix network programming differ?

How does unix system administration, unix programming, unix network programming differ? Please help. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: thulasidharan2k
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Open-source projects to learn concurrency-managed network programming in Unix?

Hi, I am a mid-career programmer with extensive experience in object-oriented design and development in C, C++, and C#. I've written a number of multi-threaded server applications and background services, although my grasp of networking protocols is a bit weak: my current job drifted away from... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: TheTaoOfPhil
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need a good book to learn UNIX Shell Scripting

I'm going to be starting a job in a month or so that I need to brush up on my Unix shell scripting skills. About 15 years ago, I took a college class for Unix shell scripting. I would like to find a good college book again, rather than just going to Amazon and just buying anything. This is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dorlow
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to learn UNIX shell scripting?

Hi Guys, I know basic command of unix and basic programming of unix as like using for loop, while loop, if..else, case statement etc. then how to learn unix shell scripting as well as use also. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aaditya321
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help for programming a UNIX Shell in C++

Hello! :) I currently got the task of programming a UNIX Shell for practice. The functionality is as follows: 1. Entering commands with the keyboard. Enter stops the input and creates a process which should start any program 2. the shell waits for termination of each command before... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DarkDan
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Wanna learn native GUI programming in UNIX - Linux ?

Hi , wanna learn native GUI programming in Unix-Linux instead of Gtk and Qt. No problem. You don't need a cross platform Gui toolkit like Gtk and Qt. And the code and syntax is also not more or less than others. Check out this code for a simple mainwindow for your application that is openend in... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sennenmut
0 Replies
gtranslator(1)							  GNOME programs						    gtranslator(1)

NAME
gtranslator -- a comfortable gettext po file editor with many bells and whistles. SYNOPSIS
gtranslator [ --help ] [ --version ] [ -a filename ] [ -e po-file ] [ -g geometry-string ] [ -l po-file-to-learn ] [ -b ] [ -s ] DESCRIPTION
gtranslator is a comfortable gettext po file editor with many features like special char featured editing, plural forms view, div. charset support, comfortable prefs, list view of messages, regular expression based search function, compile/update possiblities and much much more. Of course all standard features of a good application like DnD, session support, supplement files for mime types and menu items are present. Instant comment view, a comfortable quick navigation messages table with customizable colors, colorschemes, UTF-8 support, a high level of preferizabilation and a personal learn buffer/translation memory with autotranslation capabilities are the main features of gtranslator besides the comfortable editing of the translation entries. OPTIONS
-a --auto-translate=po-file Autotranslates the given po file with the entries from the learn buffer and exits afterwards. -e --export-learn-buffer=po-file-to-export Exports the learn buffer contents into the given plain gettext po file and exits. -g --geometry=geometry Let's you specify the geometry of gtranslator's main window. -l --learn=po-file-to-learn Learns the given po file within the command line without starting the GUI. The personal learn buffer is used as a translation memory to autoaccomplish missing translations/entries. -s --learn-statistics Print out some statistics and information about the learn buffer of gtranslator on the commandline. --display With this option you can select on which screen gtranslator should appear. --help Shows you a little help autogenerated by GNOME and with the options mentioned above. --version Prints out the version number of gtranslator. --usage Shows you the pill of options without an explanation. FILES
~/.gconf/apps/gtranslator Your personal gtranslator settings will be stored there. ~/.gtranslator This directory is used by gtranslator for all it's "private" files (e.g. temporary files). ~/.gtranslator/colorschemes/ Your personal colorschemes can be placed in this directory -- gtranslator does also list the colorschemes in this directory in the colorscheme selection box. ~/.gtranslator/etstates/ The state file for the messages table/tree is stored in this directory. ~/.gtranslator/umtf/ Your personal learn buffers (in UMTF format) are stored in this directory -- the learn buffer is used for auto translation issues. ~/.gtranslator/files/ Temporary files used by gtranslator are stored in this directory (mostly this directory should be empty). LEARN BUFFER
The learn buffer is the implementation of a personal translation memory (TM) in gtranslator. gtranslator uses the UMTF (a compressed XML file which is normally quite good human readable if uncompressed) format for storing it's learned strings. Your learned strings are then available for the autotranslation feature of gtranslator where gtranslator automatically fills in the corre- sponding and valuable translations for any message which has already been learned previously. This results in a fairly high percentage of prefilled/pretranslated messages. The common and good style of working with the learn buffer and with the autotranslation should be to learn the main po/translation files for your language via gtranslator via calling gtranslator -n -l po-file-to-learn on the command line; this will put the translated strings from this po file into your personal learn buffer. You should learn the main po files (for GNOME for example gnumeric, nautilus, evolution or any other bigger, already translated package's po file) for your language); you can use a new script from the gtranslator package to automatise this task a little bit: it's "build- gtranslator-learn-buffer.sh" which is installed into gtranslator's scripts directory which you can see by calling gtranslator -b and you simply execute the script with it's full path and simply follow the information on the command line for it. Afterwards you can simply use the "Autotranslation" menu entry from the GUI or use the "F10" hotkey to let gtranslator autotranslate all missing translations from your personal learn buffer. This will ease your translation work and make a big portion of the po files be pre-translated. With a fairly big personal learn buffer of about 2 MB you can achive many pre-translated messages for a new project/translation. If you want to use the stored learn buffer contents to produce a po file with all the "learned" translations, you can also use the "export learn buffer" capability of gtranslator to get a plain po file version of the learn buffer. USAGE EXAMPLES
Some examples for the options. gtranslator -b Shows you the real build specs/dates of gtranslator. gtranslator -s Give me statistics about the learn buffer of gtranslator. gtranslator -n -l po-file-to-learn Learns the given po file "po-file-to-learn" on the command line without starting up the GUI. gtranslator -a po-file Autotranslates all missing entries from the learn buffer if possible and exits. gtranslator -e po-file-to-export Exports your current learn buffer to the given plain gettext po file ("po-file-to-export"). gtranslator po-file Starts gtranslator with the given po-file loaded on startup. gtranslator -g "460x320+0+0" Lets gtranslator appear on the left upper edge of the screen "+0+0" and gtranslator is sized to "460x320" if possible -- if gtrans- lator needs more size for it's window contents, it'll expand itself to the necessary dimensions -- even if you defined a smaller geometry string. LICENSE
gtranslator is distributed under the GNU GPL V 2.0 or greater. AUTHORS
Ross Golder <ross@kabalak.net>, Fatih Demir <kabalak@kabalak.net> (previously also: Gediminas Paulauskas <menesis@kabalak.net>, Thomas Ziehmer <thomas@kabalak.net>, Kevin Vandersloot <kfv101@psu.edu> and Peeter Vois <peeter@kabalak.net>). WEBSITE
http://www.gtranslator.org BUGREPORTS
You can deliver bug reports to the gtranslator development team to our bug base via http://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=gtrans- lator VERSION
gtranslator 2.91.4 man-page gtranslator gtranslator 2.91.4 -- 2012-05-11 gtranslator(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:27 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy