

Also, if they have so many chickens, why don’t they just get those to make more eggs?
Ahh right! Because they are Chlorinated!
Also, if they have so many chickens, why don’t they just get those to make more eggs?
Ahh right! Because they are Chlorinated!
Another chicken and egg problem.
Steam baths are the best.
Get the steam directly out of a pressure cooker.
You will need a barrel, a rope and a pulley on a pole. Oh and something to make holes in a barrel with.
To compile:
To charge:
Yeah, one big problem of man
I found was the severe lack of explanation of what the command is mainly intended to do.
It’s as if the user is expected to run the man
after knowing what purpose a specific program exists for, which, I guess is what it is intended for.
I tend to rely on the package manager’s information and other similar sources for that information and man
mainly for determining the exact usage.
I don’t at all expect man
to be useful for someone who can just follow written instructions.
The reason being than man
is just supposed to tell the user, what typy stuff needs to be done for specific functionality. And most programs tend to be doing some small thingy and not fulfilling the user’s whole requirement in one go.
Meaning, to be happy with just man
, one needs to be able to create a solution for themselves by properly fitting little parts and that is already more than half way to being able to do programming.
Your man -a intro
example and what followed, made me more confused than before of what you were trying to say, so I am just trying to go with the feel of it for now.
…
Maybe knowing that you can use /
and then whatever string of text to find something in the man page (because it uses less
to paginate the output) would be useful for some of what you said. So you can do /-a
and press Enter to start searching for “-a”. And the reason for it being so far is because it is in the “OPTIONS” section.
I now feel like someone who reads a lot of legal documents would be fine with man
pages. Was this format made by someone in that field?
Other than stuff like ffmpeg
- which has so many features that a man page just can’t cut it; and sed
- which doesn’t have a simple hyperlink saying “you go here to learn sed regexp”, most man pages do what I need them to do.
You just need to learn the basics of how the man page is organised and what the brackets in the SYNOPSIS section mean and that makes using them much easier.
We also have man man
for that purpose.
I actually used to make backups (Export) of each edited key and keep them in folders with context, so I could later look them up or even set them again in case of a reinstall.
Now, they are lying, forgotten, on some NTFS drive that I haven’t opened in years.
Unless you have what it takes to be a celebrity