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Go to the beginning of the line |
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or
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Go to the end of the line |
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or
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Go left one character |
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Go right one word |
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Go right one character |
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Move between the beginning of the line and the current position of the cursor. This allows you to change something and return to original position |
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Cut the word before the cursor and add it to the clipboard |
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Cut the part of the line after the cursor and add it to the clipboard |
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Cut the part of the line before the cursor and add it to the clipboard |
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Paste the last thing you cut from the clipboard. The y here stands for “yank” |
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Capitalize every character from the cursor to the end of the current word, converting the characters to upper case |
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Uncapitalize every character from the cursor to the end of the current word, converting the characters to lower case |
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Capitalize the character under the cursor. Your cursor will move to the end of the current word. |
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Automatically complete the file, directory, or command you’re typing |
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Go to the previous command in the command history |
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or
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Go to the next command in the command history |
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or
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Revert any changes to a command you've called from your history, if you've edited it |
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Recall the last command matching the characters you provide. Press this shortcut and start typing to search your bash history for a command |
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Run a command you found with Ctrl + R |
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Leave history searching mode without running a command |
What is your favorite Bash (Unix shell) hotkey? Do you have any useful tips for it? Let other users know below.
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