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{:auto_ids} absolute path : A path that refers to a particular location in a file system. Absolute paths are usually written with respect to the file system's root directory, and begin with either "/" (on Unix) or "\" (on Microsoft Windows). See also: relative path.
argument : A value given to a function or program when it runs. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with parameter.
command shell : See shell
command-line interface : A user interface based on typing commands, usually at a REPL. See also: graphical user interface.
comment
: A remark in a program that is intended to help human readers understand what is going on,
but is ignored by the computer.
Comments in Python, R, and the Unix shell start with a #
character and run to the end of the line;
comments in SQL start with --
,
and other languages have other conventions.
current working directory
: The directory that relative paths are calculated from;
equivalently,
the place where files referenced by name only are searched for.
Every process has a current working directory.
The current working directory is usually referred to using the shorthand notation .
(pronounced "dot").
file system : A set of files, directories, and I/O devices (such as keyboards and screens). A file system may be spread across many physical devices, or many file systems may be stored on a single physical device; the operating system manages access.
filename extension
: The portion of a file's name that comes after the final "." character.
By convention this identifies the file's type:
.txt
means "text file", .png
means "Portable Network Graphics file",
and so on. These conventions are not enforced by most operating systems:
it is perfectly possible (but confusing!) to name an MP3 sound file homepage.html
.
Since many applications use filename extensions to identify the MIME type of the file,
misnaming files may cause those applications to fail.
filter : A program that transforms a stream of data. Many Unix command-line tools are written as filters: they read data from standard input, process it, and write the result to standard output.
flag
: A terse way to specify an option or setting to a command-line program.
By convention Unix applications use a dash followed by a single letter,
such as -v
, or two dashes followed by a word, such as --verbose
,
while DOS applications use a slash, such as /V
.
Depending on the application, a flag may be followed by a single argument, as in -o /tmp/output.txt
.
for loop : A loop that is executed once for each value in some kind of set, list, or range. See also: while loop.
graphical user interface : A user interface based on selecting items and actions from a graphical display, usually controlled by using a mouse. See also: command-line interface.
home directory : The default directory associated with an account on a computer system. By convention, all of a user's files are stored in or below her home directory.
loop : A set of instructions to be executed multiple times. Consists of a loop body and (usually) a condition for exiting the loop. See also for loop and while loop.
loop body : The set of statements or commands that are repeated inside a for loop or while loop.
MIME type : MIME (Multi-Purpose Internet Mail Extensions) types describe different file types for exchange on the Internet, for example images, audio, and documents.
operating system : Software that manages interactions between users, hardware, and software processes. Common examples are Linux, OS X, and Windows.
parameter : A variable named in a function's declaration that is used to hold a value passed into the call. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with argument.
parent directory
: The directory that "contains" the one in question.
Every directory in a file system except the root directory has a parent.
A directory's parent is usually referred to using the shorthand notation ..
(pronounced "dot dot").
path : A description that specifies the location of a file or directory within a file system. See also: absolute path, relative path.
pipe : A connection from the output of one program to the input of another. When two or more programs are connected in this way, they are called a "pipeline".
process : A running instance of a program, containing code, variable values, open files and network connections, and so on. Processes are the "actors" that the operating system manages; it typically runs each process for a few milliseconds at a time to give the impression that they are executing simultaneously.
prompt : A character or characters display by a REPL to show that it is waiting for its next command.
quoting
: (in the shell):
Using quotation marks of various kinds to prevent the shell from interpreting special characters.
For example, to pass the string *.txt
to a program,
it is usually necessary to write it as '*.txt'
(with single quotes)
so that the shell will not try to expand the *
wildcard.
read-evaluate-print loop : (REPL): A command-line interface that reads a command from the user, executes it, prints the result, and waits for another command.
redirect : To send a command's output to a file rather than to the screen or another command, or equivalently to read a command's input from a file.
regular expression : A pattern that specifies a set of character strings. REs are most often used to find sequences of characters in strings.
relative path : A path that specifies the location of a file or directory with respect to the current working directory. Any path that does not begin with a separator character ("/" or "\") is a relative path. See also: absolute path.
root directory : The top-most directory in a file system. Its name is "/" on Unix (including Linux and Mac OS X) and "\" on Microsoft Windows.
shell : A [command-line interface](#command-line interface) such as Bash (the Bourne-Again Shell) or the Microsoft Windows DOS shell that allows a user to interact with the operating system.
shell script : A set of shell commands stored in a file for re-use. A shell script is a program executed by the shell; the name "script" is used for historical reasons.
standard input : A process's default input stream. In interactive command-line applications, it is typically connected to the keyboard; in a pipe, it receives data from the standard output of the preceding process.
standard output : A process's default output stream. In interactive command-line applications, data sent to standard output is displayed on the screen; in a pipe, it is passed to the standard input of the next process.
sub-directory : A directory contained within another directory.
tab completion : A feature provided by many interactive systems in which pressing the Tab key triggers automatic completion of the current word or command.
variable : A name in a program that is associated with a value or a collection of values.
while loop : A loop that keeps executing as long as some condition is true. See also: for loop.
wildcard
: A character used in pattern matching.
In the Unix shell,
the wildcard *
matches zero or more characters,
so that *.txt
matches all files whose names end in .txt
.
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