this post was submitted on 21 Sep 2024
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Asklemmy
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ls -al
I learned you can edit
.bashrc
(in your home dir) and update the alias for ls to include what I like. It has saved me lots of keystrokes. Mine isls -lha
in addition to whatever color coding stuff is there by default.You might like
eza
even more!Hmm, that's not working for me. You mean use those as options? 'ls -eza'?
No, it's like an ls replacement: https://github.com/eza-community/eza
Aha. Well, I guess I'm not the target audience because I can't be bothered to go through the installation steps. It's not in the LMDE repository, but I wish it were!
It's pretty easy. You either get it from Cargo (the Rust package manager) or add a custom repo to apt.
Cargo is the easier and safer option:
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh && cargo install eza
Custom apt repo:
In my opinion though, you should also try lsd. It's even better than eza. You can also get it from Cargo, just a simple
cargo install lsd
.No,
eza
is one of those modern Rust replacement programs. It replacesls
.There's a whole bunch of cool modern replacements. Here's a handy list: altbox.dev
I personally use
bat
andrg
all the time, and find them much more suitable for everyday tasks.Edit: And to clarify, I didn't create either list, they're just ones I'd bookmarked at some point.
Even better than
rg
isrga
. Indeed, you have a fine list.The mobile site doesn't have the list. I was so confused.
Ew, sorry. This list is similar and more accessible:
https://github.com/ibraheemdev/modern-unix
You might like lsd even more than that!
A lot of distros include a .bashrc with common
ls
aliases commented out, just waiting for you to activate them if you like.Another
ls
alias I'm a fan of isls -latr
which I alias tolt
. It gives you a time sorted directory listing with the most recent next to your cursor (helpful for large directories).