The weirdest thing for me is when people complain about terminal when there is a meme how much easier it is to do something on Linux compared to windows or MacOS.
Terminal is the easiest way to highlight that for a meme.
Hint: :q!
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The weirdest thing for me is when people complain about terminal when there is a meme how much easier it is to do something on Linux compared to windows or MacOS.
Terminal is the easiest way to highlight that for a meme.
Are there people who are mad at other people for using the terminal? Is this really a thing that exists?
Speaking from experience.... Yes. Absolutely yes.
Yes, that's a real thing. They use it as an excuse to dog on linux distros & say "Muh linux not great yet"
I donβt think so, but I do criticize not having an option, that is why I stopped using Cisco personally and professionally, some things are fast using the cli, some things just need an Ui, you need both.
Ever since switching to fish, I've been using the terminal more and more. It's the most intuitive interface I can think of. Now to fix my neovim configuration...
Yes it is bad ux/ui but its better than windows regedit or its 20 control panels that don't do the thing you want, or windows terminal that you use constantly and don't notice.
T. I did not understand how anyone would like terminal for software and now i swear by my drop down console. But i agree, the few areas of terminal people mostly use should be covered by a gui, eg gnome having "open terminal in folder location" and gnome having ability to add repos to software center like kde.
Windows kept making things easier so people could let their brains rot away.
I mean, legitimately, unless you're doing power user things, you don't really need the terminal. And if you are doing power user things, then find me a Windows power user that has never used the command prompt or powershell.
Noooo, you cannot have a consistent UI/UX experience across platforms with decades old commands and tools, my imaginary grandma might get confused, also you need three IT degrees to type "man command" into a term window.
Tbf, most man files are not easy to understand. Between man, tldr, ArchWiki, and an occasional O'Reilly book I can usually get things done, but documentation on Linux still has a lot of room for improvement.
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.
meanwhile Windows users: let me drop into this random strangers discord who claims he will make my PC faster by dropping this .bat file that will run thousands of commands to "debloat" my install. also let me edit the registry and add random values to keys that I don't know what they're used for. this process is basically irreversible because I will inevitably forget which keys I've edited over time, wow windows is so simple and easy and intuitive π€‘
Amen. I remember having to frequently reinstall the system to keep it performant. Thanks windows rot.
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.
I used to be on the yelling guys side and boy was I wrong. I now write scripts to do anything repetitive, all the time and it's great. I have a whole library of them I use and add to and improve all the time.
Yeah, I was wrong.
It always makes me kind of sad when people disparage CLI use. It's like people thinking they don't need to actually learn anything because they can always look up what they need to know on their phone. It seems a shame to miss so much of the richness of the experience. I found myself arguing, promoting, whatever, terminal use a few times and then realized how pointless it is. It's like arguing with someone about what food they like. You can just hope they develop a more sophisticated palate at some point, or at least become more open-minded, but you can't force it on them.
This was a long way to get around to saying I like that you had that change of frame and are embracing the fun of personalizing your interactions with your computer.