📚 Collaborative cheatsheets for console commands
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.github | 4 years ago | |
.husky | 3 years ago | |
contributing-guides | 4 years ago | |
images | 3 years ago | |
pages | 3 years ago | |
pages.bs | 3 years ago | |
pages.da | 3 years ago | |
pages.de | 3 years ago | |
pages.es | 3 years ago | |
pages.fa | 3 years ago | |
pages.fr | 3 years ago | |
pages.hi | 3 years ago | |
pages.id | 3 years ago | |
pages.it | 3 years ago | |
pages.ja | 3 years ago | |
pages.ko | 3 years ago | |
pages.ml | 3 years ago | |
pages.nl | 3 years ago | |
pages.no | 3 years ago | |
pages.pl | 3 years ago | |
pages.pt_BR | 3 years ago | |
pages.pt_PT | 4 years ago | |
pages.ru | 3 years ago | |
pages.sh | 3 years ago | |
pages.sv | 3 years ago | |
pages.ta | 3 years ago | |
pages.th | 4 years ago | |
pages.tr | 3 years ago | |
pages.zh | 3 years ago | |
pages.zh_TW | 4 years ago | |
scripts | 3 years ago | |
.editorconfig | 4 years ago | |
.gitattributes | 4 years ago | |
.gitignore | 4 years ago | |
.markdownlintrc | 5 years ago | |
CLIENT-SPECIFICATION.md | 4 years ago | |
COMMUNITY-ROLES.md | 4 years ago | |
CONTRIBUTING.md | 3 years ago | |
GOVERNANCE.md | 4 years ago | |
LICENSE.md | 4 years ago | |
MAINTAINERS.md | 3 years ago | |
README.md | 3 years ago | |
package-lock.json | 3 years ago | |
package.json | 3 years ago |
The tldr-pages project is a collection of community-maintained help pages for command-line tools, that aims to be a simpler, more approachable complement to traditional man pages.
Maybe you are new to the command-line world? Or just a little rusty?
Or perhaps you can't always remember the arguments to lsof
, or tar
?
It certainly 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.
There seems to be room for simpler help pages, focused on practical examples. How about:
This repository is just that: an ever-growing collection of examples for the most common UNIX, Linux, macOS, SunOS and Windows command-line tools.
A popular and convenient way to access these pages on your computer is to install the Node.js client, which is supported by the tldr-pages project maintainers:
npm install -g tldr
That way you can write tldr tar
in the terminal to show the tldr page for tar
,
just like you would write man tar
to show its manpage.
However, if you just want to browse without installing anything, check out the PDF version.
There are also various other clients provided by the community, both for the command line and for other platforms:
brew install tldr
brew install porras/tap/tlcr
pub global activate tldr
Preferences
> Downloads
> User Contributed
and find tldr pages
in the listtldr
command via a docker container: alias tldr='docker run --rm -it -v ~/.tldr/:/root/.tldr/ nutellinoit/tldr'
go get github.com/pranavraja/tldr
(or platform binaries)go get 4d63.com/tldr
or brew install 4d63/tldr/tldr
(or platform binaries)go get github.com/elecprog/tldr
(or platform binaries)go get github.com/isacikgoz/tldr
(or platform binaries)go get github.com/HardDie/myTldr
(or platform binaries) (supports custom pages directories)npm install -g tldr
opam install tldr
cpanm App::tldr
composer global require brainmaestro/tldr
pip install tldr
or pacman -S tldr
on Arch Linuxpip install tldr.py
or apt-get install tldr-py
on Debian-based distributionsdevtools::install_github('kirillseva/tldrrr')
gem install tldrb
cargo install tealdeer
or brew install tealdeer
There is also a comprehensive list of clients in our Wiki.
All tldr
pages are kept as Markdown files right here in this repository,
so you can edit them directly and submit your changes as pull requests.
All contributions are welcome! We strive to maintain a welcoming and collaborative community. Have a look at the contributing guidelines, and go ahead!
If you'd like to contribute to translations, you can visit https://lukwebsforge.github.io/tldri18n/ to see the current progress of all translations.
Cheat allows you to create and view interactive cheatsheets on the command-line. It was designed to help remind *nix system administrators of options for commands that they use frequently, but not frequently enough to remember.
Bro pages are a highly readable supplement to man pages. Bro pages show concise, common-case examples for Unix commands. The examples are submitted by the user base, and can be voted up or down; the best entries are what people see first when they look up a command.
kb is a minimalist command line knowledge base manager. kb can be used to organize your notes and cheatsheets in a minimalist and clean way. It supports also non-text files.
eg
provides detailed examples with explanations on the command line.
Examples come from the repository, but eg
supports displaying
custom examples and commands alongside the defaults.
devhints Rico's cheatsheets are not just focused on the command line and include a plethora of other cheatsheets related to programming.
TL;DR stands for "Too Long; Didn't Read". It originates in Internet slang, where it is used to indicate that a long text (or parts of it) has been skipped as too lengthy. Read more in How-To Geek's article.