neither the graphic user interface nor the text user interface are immortal, but the graphic user interface is slightly longer lived because visual indicators are not tied to language, which is constantly in flux.
bash and *nix commands are an absolute immemorable mess. powershell is the command line shell with the most staying power, due to its standardized commmand naming scheme. but the reality is, a 🗑️ symbol will keep its meaning for much longer than “rm” “del” or even “Remove-item”.
visual indicators are not tied to language, which is constantly in flux.
Core Unix commands have not changed since the 70s my guy. The syntax of modern ls, tar etc are still 1:1 compatible with versions that predate the invention of the concept of a GUI. Go 10 years back in GUI design back to 2014 and see how similar things are to today.
The one exception to this is Powershell, which has the core Unix command names as aliases to the equivalent Powershell commands without any attempt to convert the flags between them. Microsoft really desperately wants to convert *nix programmers and sysadmins back to Windows, and they’re failing spectacularly because no one wants to use a shell where ls -l throws an error.
bash and *nix commands are an absolute immemorable mess.
i am speaking in the very long term, hundreds to thousands of years. this was a joke/facetious response to a joke/overdramatic meme. sorry that wasn’t immediately obvious lol
Yeah I can never remember the syntax for a few commands, but surprise, those are the commands I don’t use often. And the command line being standardized means that using a shell on a Mac (work) feels… basically the same as using one on my Linux home servers.
neither the graphic user interface nor the text user interface are immortal, but the graphic user interface is slightly longer lived because visual indicators are not tied to language, which is constantly in flux.
bash and *nix commands are an absolute immemorable mess. powershell is the command line shell with the most staying power, due to its standardized commmand naming scheme. but the reality is, a 🗑️ symbol will keep its meaning for much longer than “rm” “del” or even “Remove-item”.
Core Unix commands have not changed since the 70s my guy. The syntax of modern
ls
,tar
etc are still 1:1 compatible with versions that predate the invention of the concept of a GUI. Go 10 years back in GUI design back to 2014 and see how similar things are to today.The one exception to this is Powershell, which has the core Unix command names as aliases to the equivalent Powershell commands without any attempt to convert the flags between them. Microsoft really desperately wants to convert *nix programmers and sysadmins back to Windows, and they’re failing spectacularly because no one wants to use a shell where
ls -l
throws an error.that sounds like a skill issue.
i am speaking in the very long term, hundreds to thousands of years. this was a joke/facetious response to a joke/overdramatic meme. sorry that wasn’t immediately obvious lol
In the grim darkness of the far future, there is only war and power shell
“grep” is an English verb, change my mind.
Yeah I can never remember the syntax for a few commands, but surprise, those are the commands I don’t use often. And the command line being standardized means that using a shell on a Mac (work) feels… basically the same as using one on my Linux home servers.
alias 🗑️='rm'
ok what now
Ehm, as long as team-*nix doesn’t uninvent the wastebasket :)
Nothing lasts forever, not two random letters that may have some meaning nor a weird emoji 🕳️