January 2024
Intermediate to advanced
718 pages
20h 15m
English
If you’re used to a GUI tool such as Explorer on Windows or Finder on MacOS for navigating to your files, then you’ll be familiar with the idea of folders—locations on your hard drive that can hold files and other folders.
When you’re at the command prompt, you have access to these same folders. But at the prompt, these folders are usually called directories (because they contain lists of other directories and files). These directories are organized into a strict hierarchy. On Unix-based systems (including macOS and WSL), there’s one top-level directory, called / (a forward slash). On plain Windows, there is a top-level directory for each drive on your system, so you’ll find the top level for your C: drive ...
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