! A screenshot of a Linux terminal showing some packages being installed. One of the package is named “fribidi”. This name rhymes with something that evokes visceral horrors beyond comprehension.
An image of a Vietnam war soldier having flashbacks is superimposed !<
Somewhat OT, but some commands can be annoyingly inconsistent and/or confusing as well. Examples:
cp
requires the-r
flag to copy directories recursively, whilemv
does not need any additional flags.find
searches for files in real-time based on various criteria, whilelocate
uses a pre-built database to find files quickly. I know they have separate use cases, but for beginners…The
zip
syntax is straightforward for both archiving and compressing. For example,zip archive.zip file1 file2
. Thetar
syntax on the other hand is confusing, especially when adding compression. I mean, look at this bad boy:tar -czvf archive.tar.gz file1 file2
.Wonder if I should post this under [email protected]. 😄
find
is also just a fucking mess in terms of UX. The fact that the ordering of positional and optional arguments are so strongly tied to each other has always driven me fucking bonkers. Nowadays, I installfd
everywhere I can and tell people to switch to it and never look back.locate
is nice and all, but I always forget to update the db and I don’t want it populating in the background.tar
doesn’t bug me as much, provided you use unix or GNU style options.tar xvf foo.tar
is just icky and less readable thantar -xvf foo.tar
. I will happily concede that it’s not very ergonomic though. I used to rely on things likedtrx
(short for Do The Right eXtraction) because it was such a pain to remember the options fortar
/unrar
/unzip
/7z
.I got accustomed to the options for
tar
and7z
. forfind
, I just pipe it togrep
or useless
to search for something. It just takes time the first time you run itDitto for
tar
andunrar
, although I deal with.7z
so infrequently that I have to look at the manual every time I use it.find
’s fucked up argument handling really becomes a problem for me when I want to use it in a complex pipeline or when using the-exec
flag. I’ve spent far less time debugging in those situations since switching tofd
. I won’t yuck the yum of folks who are comfortable and likefind
, but I feel that we probably have more approachable alternatives for new users.
You reminded me of
fd
. Thank you!
I learned the proper meaning of tar flags a long time ago, but then I accidentally saw a post somewhere describing “czf” and “xzf” as acronyms in german accent: “Create Ze File!” and “Xtract Ze File!” and now everytime I use tar in the simpler ways I hear in my head a german voice shouting these words as I type the flags.
Awesome. Now I have the shouting German in my head too.
Zank you!
Tlist Ze File!
lisT Ze File!
but how would you mv something without moving all it contains?
is there a non -r use case? 🤔
I see it as: mv is just renaming a file, in this case a directory file, with a different full name (path)
perhaps file system just requires unlinking and relinking to move? whereas when you make a copy you want to be able to modify it independently
Fribidi! Fribidi! Fribidi! Fribidi! Fribidi! angry toilet with Tux head goes towards you
I’m going to make an HID library called Systematic Kernel Interface for Basic Input Data Integration
I saw this package for update a few day ago, it made me chuckle
Can someone explain the joke? I don’t get it.
‘Fribidi’ (a package in linux) sounds like ‘skibidi’ toilet, that’s it. Yeah I know there isnt much of a joke, its just that there are many linux packages with funny names