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Display which distro is installed
Works on Ubuntu

Copy all files. All normal files, all hidden files and all files starting with - (minus).
./* is for copying files starting with - .[!.]* is for copying hidden files and avoiding copying files from the parent directory. ..?* is for copying files starting with .. (avoids the directory ..) /path/to/dir the path to the directory where the files should be copied Can also be used as a script. Input argument is /path/to/dir in tcsh, replace .[!.]* with .[^.]*

Start another instance of X via SSH

Monitor logs in Linux using Tail
Works in Ubuntu, I hope it will work on all Linux machines. For Unixes, tail should be capable of handling more than one file with '-f' option. This command line simply take log files which are text files, and not ending with a number, and it will continuously monitor those files. Putting one alias in .profile will be more useful.

Convert CSV to JSON
Replace 'csv_file.csv' with your filename.

find co-ordinates of a location
Just add this to your .bashrc file. Use quotes when query has multiple word length.

Automatically find and re-attach to a detached screen session
-RR option is used to resume the first appropriate detached screen session

take a look to command before action
add |sh when you agree the list, I often use that method to prevent typos in dangerous or long operations

Multiple variable assignments from command output in BASH
This version uses read instead of eval.

add all files not under version control to repository
This should handle whitespaces well and will not get confused if your filenames have "?" in them


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