Cool cool. Some great tips here, thanks! And even as a long time UNIX user, you taught me something new! I knew that hitting control-C would give me exit status 130, but didn't know that that was 128 plus the signal number (e.g. getting 137 for SIGKILL)! Cool! Now I know. :) I think I picked up a couple other new-to-me things, as well, and enjoyed the overview of other stuff I did know -- which I'll now be passing along to some folks I've been mentoring. :) So, again, thanks for this!
As a total side thing [I'm still watching to see what I might have to say about the overall thrust of the video], re 1:15 - I'm _guessing_ that your native language is something other than English, and _hoping_ that as such, you find it useful to have friendly tips about English from time to time. And as such, I'd like to point you in the direction of the word "moot" -- rather than "mute". I think even a lot of native speakers have come to believe that the word in the phrase "a moot point" is "mute", but to me, the history of why it's actually moot (as best I understand it -- which, granted, could be mistaken; do your own research if you care) is quite interesting -- historically, a "moot" was a meeting (related etymology there!), and in particular, a slow meeting of the town elders or whatever... where they'd debate things endlessly, and sometimes fruitlessly. So, "a moot point" is a point that we're kicking out of the practical discussion, and sending it off to the moot to discuss. It's either not important or not practical or whatever to discuss further in whatever other context it was being discussed in. I learned of this from reading Lord of the Rings, in which the Ents have their "Ent moot" -- a slow, thoughtful conversation... though I presume not all moots were quite so thoughtful. ;) Anyway, thought you might find that interesting, and I'm hoping it is, because I hate to just criticize someone's usage (and that's not really my point)... I just like sharing interesting tidbits, and, so, yeah. Check out "moot" (or take my word for it (at your own risk)). :)
Cool cool. Some great tips here, thanks! And even as a long time UNIX user, you taught me something new! I knew that hitting control-C would give me exit status 130, but didn't know that that was 128 plus the signal number (e.g. getting 137 for SIGKILL)! Cool! Now I know. :) I think I picked up a couple other new-to-me things, as well, and enjoyed the overview of other stuff I did know -- which I'll now be passing along to some folks I've been mentoring. :) So, again, thanks for this!
Great content.
I had this video saved for over a month to find time to go through everything. Totally worth it!
@@renan00almeida glad you did! Thank you for watching and engaging 🙏
As a total side thing [I'm still watching to see what I might have to say about the overall thrust of the video], re 1:15 - I'm _guessing_ that your native language is something other than English, and _hoping_ that as such, you find it useful to have friendly tips about English from time to time. And as such, I'd like to point you in the direction of the word "moot" -- rather than "mute". I think even a lot of native speakers have come to believe that the word in the phrase "a moot point" is "mute", but to me, the history of why it's actually moot (as best I understand it -- which, granted, could be mistaken; do your own research if you care) is quite interesting -- historically, a "moot" was a meeting (related etymology there!), and in particular, a slow meeting of the town elders or whatever... where they'd debate things endlessly, and sometimes fruitlessly. So, "a moot point" is a point that we're kicking out of the practical discussion, and sending it off to the moot to discuss. It's either not important or not practical or whatever to discuss further in whatever other context it was being discussed in.
I learned of this from reading Lord of the Rings, in which the Ents have their "Ent moot" -- a slow, thoughtful conversation... though I presume not all moots were quite so thoughtful. ;)
Anyway, thought you might find that interesting, and I'm hoping it is, because I hate to just criticize someone's usage (and that's not really my point)... I just like sharing interesting tidbits, and, so, yeah. Check out "moot" (or take my word for it (at your own risk)). :)
English is the 3rd out of 4 languages I speak, and I'm always in for a good etymology TIL! Thank you for sharing this
Bash still breaks my brain a bit, but this is a lot of useful stuff to ponder and wrap my head around. Thank you!!
thank you so much for sharing with us your advanced knowledge, i sincerely do appreciate, i can't thank you enough bro
@@stanleychukwu7424 my pleasure 🫡
Thank you, I learned a lots of cool stuff I will start implementing in my own scripts
I like the font used in your text editor. what is it name?
Envy Code R from Damien Guard - there's a nerd fonts version: www.nerdfonts.com/font-downloads
thanks for sharing, I learned new stuff.
amazing work
Very useful
Thank you for sher
thank you
⭐