Commands using printf (206)

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Get your internal IP address and nothing but your internal IP address
Will return your internal IP address.

Replace Caps-lock with Control-key
You can return to defaults with "setxkbmap". More here: http://dailycli.blogspot.com/2009/12/xmodmap-replace-caps-lock-with-left.html

recursively change file name from uppercase to lowercase (or viceversa)
easier way to recursively change files to lowercase using rename instead

Find the package that installed a command
Put this one-line function somewhere in your shell init, re-login and try $ whatinstalled This is an elaborate wrapper around "dpkg -S", with numerous safeguards. Symlinks and command aliases are resolved. If the searched command is not an existing executable file or was installed by some other means than dpkg/apt, nothing is printed to stdout, otherwise the package name.

Find passwords that has been stored as plain text in NetworkManager

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

Find all files containing a word
shorter :p

Given process ID print its environment variables
Same as previous but without fugly sed =x

Access folder "-"
If you try to access cd - you go to the last folder you were in.

See n most used commands in your bash history
You can append these commands to the bottom of the history file to access them easier with the Up key: $ sort ~/.bash_history|uniq -c|sort -n|tail -n 10|tr -s " "|cut -d' ' -f3- >> ~/.bash_history


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