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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
So, I am trying to find and print info about all of the .txt files in a current directory. This is the information that I intend to gather:
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Pretty... (2 Replies)
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Experts,
I have a requirement where i need to setup a batch job which runs everymonth and move the pdf files from unix server to windows servers.
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Hi,
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all and greetings from Ireland!
I have not used much unix or awk/sed in years and have forgotten a lot.
Easy enough query tho.
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5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
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6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I am trying to check through all of a certain type of file in all main directories, and find the top 10 that are taking up the most space. How can I do that? I was thinking like du *.file | sort -n | head (1 Reply)
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7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Howdy all,
I've used various applications in the past that ran in unix and windoze and unfortunately several of those programs are migrating to a windoze only environment so management is bagging the proprietary unix boxes in the process. AArrgggghh So here's my question for all you serious... (3 Replies)
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
can anyone tell me what exactly the following UNIX notation code does cause I need to do the same in windows?
for x in webapps/sal/*.htm*
do
mv $x $x.bak
sed 's@bob@sal@g' $x.bak > $x
done
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lavaghman
1 Replies
KEYNAV(1) General Commands Manual KEYNAV(1)
NAME
keynav - a keyboard-driven mouse cursor mover
SYNOPSIS
keynav
DESCRIPTION
Keynav makes your keyboard a fast mouse cursor mover. You can move the cursor to any point on the screen with a few key strokes. It also
simulates mouse click. You can do everything mouse can do with a keyboard.
HOW TO USE
Run keynav, and activate it by pressing Ctrl+; (semicolon). You should see a thin frame on the screen with a cross in it.
Default configuration:
* h : select the left half of the region
* j : select the bottom half of the region
* k : select the top half of the region
* l : select the right half of the region
* Shift+h : move the region left
* Shift+j : move the region down
* Shift+k : move the region up
* Shift+l : move the region right
* Semicolon: move the cursor to the center of the selected region
* Spacebar : move the cursor and left-click
* Escape : cancel the move
CONFIGURATION
You can configure your own key setting. There is an example in /usr/share/doc/keynav/keynavrc. Copy it to $HOME/.keynavrc and edit it as
you like.
CONFFILE COMMANDS
* start : activate keynav
* end : deactivate keynav
* cut-left : select the left half of the region
* cut-right : select the right half of the region
* cut-up : select the top half of the region
* cut-down : select the bottom half of the region
* move-left : move the region left
* move-right : move the region right
* move-up : move the region up
* move-down : move the region down
* warp : move the cursor to the center of the selected region
* click 1 : left-click
* click 2 : middle-click
* click 3 : right-click
* doubleclick 1: left-click twice quickly
* doubleclick 2: middle-click twice quickly
* doubleclick 3: right-click twice quickly
* drag <button> [keyseq]: toggle dragging mode for the given button
Example: "drag 1 alt" to do a alt+click-drag
* grid <rows>x<columns> : change the grid layout of the selection
Example: "grid 2x3" to cut screen to 6 cells
* cell-select <row>x<column>: select a specific cell in the grid
* cell-select <cell> : select a specific cell in the grid
AUTHOR
keynav was written by Jordan Sissel <jls@semicomplete.com>.
This manual page was written by Wen-Yen Chuang <caleb@calno.com>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
KEYNAV(1)