Which follows the similar functionality used by the cd -
command to switch to the previous directory you were in. Very handy!
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You can do what 👀
There's more! Well, it's more a bash thing than a cd thing.. in bash the variable $_
refers to the last argument to the previous command. So you can do the following:
> mkdir -p my/nested/dir
> cd $_
> pwd
/home/user/my/nested/dir
It's handy for a whole host of things, like piping/touching then opening a file, chown then chmod, etc.
On many terminal emulators you can also use Alt-. to search through your history of previous arguments, so mkdir foo
followed by cd [Alt-.]
will populate your command line with cd foo
for example. If you have some other command in between you can just hit Alt-. repeatedly
Or ESC followed by "." Repeating it works too.
You are an absolute king. Never again will I cp a file to a far off land, and then retype the entire path a second time to open it. Thank you!
That's incredible, I never knew that. Thank you!
This is amazing ♥️
There's also pushd
and popd
so that you can pushd
into one directory, move around as much as you want and then go back to before the pushd
with popd
… how have I not ever come across that before?!
This thread has been invaluable for me lol
Use switch
, boomer!
Old habits die hard. Thanks for pointing this out. I updated the post.
Oh lol, I was just trying to poke fun, sorry if it came across as accusatory. 😎👍
NEVER!!
What's the difference? Genuine question
Checkout was one of those commands that I joking would call Turing complete because of how much you can do with it (I haven't actually tried to see if it is, but am fully prepared for someone to be nerd sniped and tell me it actually is). I think they're mostly the same, but switch and restore were added as more straightforward versions of checkout and reset.
Great tip!! Thanks!
That's so cool, this can be my favorite command so on. Switching between two branches is easy with that.
Note that git checkout -
/ git switch -
examine reflog to find previous branch. Which means if you renamed the branch, at least current version of Git would be unable to run git switch -
.
But evidently git rev-parse -
will not print out the previous branch 😔 that would have been useful for scripts