📚 Collaborative cheatsheets for console commands

Antonio 6261682888 add ssh-keygen преди 9 години
pages 6261682888 add ssh-keygen преди 9 години
scripts 1c30a89490 Remove lint-changed scipt, just make lint everything instead преди 9 години
.editorconfig f1d3e87069 Travis CI integration: automatic linting, rebuilding index.json, building pages archive, and little other improvements преди 9 години
.gitignore 3109879dbd Ignore .bundle folder преди 9 години
.travis.yml c47f834311 Optimize make lint task преди 9 години
CONTRIBUTING.md 76f94dfac2 Improve Contributing Guidelines: преди 9 години
Gemfile f1d3e87069 Travis CI integration: automatic linting, rebuilding index.json, building pages archive, and little other improvements преди 9 години
Gemfile.lock d2c7181f9a Update gems преди 9 години
LICENSE.md 8d6fa5235c New README & CONTRIBUTING that apply to pages only преди 11 години
MAINTAINERS 204475c7b7 lgtm.co integration преди 9 години
Makefile c1c584fa7c Add prerequisites task to Makefile which warns about installation of Ruby and bundler преди 9 години
README.md e5a0e5cf00 adjust whitespace for source readability преди 9 години
screenshot.png 8d6fa5235c New README & CONTRIBUTING that apply to pages only преди 11 години

README.md

tldr

Build Status Gitter chat

tldr is a collection of simplified and community-driven man pages.

What does tldr mean?

TL;DR stands for "Too Long; Didn't Read". It originates in Internet slang, where it is used to indicate parts of the text skipped as too lengthy. Read more in the TLDR article on Wikipedia.

What is tldr?

New to the command-line world? Or just a little rusty? Or perhaps you can't always remember the arguments to lsof, or tar?

Maybe it doesn't help that the first option explained in man tar is:

-b blocksize
   Specify the block size, in 512-byte records, for tape drive I/O.
   As a rule, this argument is only needed when reading from or writing to tape drives,
   and usually not even then as the default block size of 20 records (10240 bytes) is very common.

Surely people could benefit from simplified "show me the common usages" man pages. What about:

tldr screenshot

This repository is just that: an ever-growing collection of examples for the most common UNIX / Linux / OSX / SunOS commands.

Clients

You can access these pages on your computer using one of the following clients:

Let us know if you are building one and we can add it to this list!

Contributing

  • Your favourite command isn't covered?
  • You can think of more examples for an existing command?

Contributions are most welcome! Have a look at the contributing guidelines and go ahead!