Shorter and made into a function. Show Sample Output
Just add this function to your .zshrc / .bashrc, and by typing "shout *URL*" you get a randomly chosen English word that ShoutKey.com uses to short your URL. You may now go to shoutkey.com/*output_word* and get redirected. The URL will be valid for 5 minutes. (I've never used sed before, so I'll be quite glad if someone could straighten up the sed commands and combine them (perhaps also removing the whitespace). If so, I'll update it right away ;) ) Show Sample Output
Subtly different to the -n+p method... and probably wrong in so many ways....... But it's shorter. Just.
Renames all files in a directory named foo to bar. foobar1 gets renamed to barbar1 barfoo2 gets renamed to barbar2 fooobarfoo gets renamed to barobarfoo NOTE: Will break for files with spaces AND new lines AND for an empty expansion of the glob '*'
Capitalize first letter of each word in a string. Show Sample Output
same but redirecting to player and putting whaever text line.. works on my ubuntu machine ...
usage: tpb searchterm example: tpb the matrix trilogy This searches for torrents from thepiratebay and displays the top results in reverse order, so the 1st result is at the bottom instead of the top -- which is better for command line users
Use sed to remove the last line of a file only if it is empty.
The option --porcelain makes the output of git easier to parse. This one-liner may not work if there is a space in the modified file name.
Translate strings from non-german to german (and vice versa) using LEO. Put it in your ~/.bashrc.
Usage:
leo words
To use another language other than english, use an option:
leo -xx words
Valid language options:
ch - chinese
en - english
es - spanish
fr - french
it - italian
pl - polish
pt - portuguese
ru - russian
The other language will always be german!
Show Sample Output
Simply sourcing .bashrc does not function correctly when you edit it and change an alias for a function or the other way round with the *same name*. I therefor use this function. Prior to re-sourcing .bashrc it unsets all aliases and functions.
For mac users ! Show Sample Output
Dependencies on phone: adb access, screencap command, base64 command. Dependencies on computer: adb, sed, base64, display (from imagemagick, but can substitute other image viewer which reads from stdin). This should work around adb stupidies (i.e. that it replaces \n with \r\n) with base64.
Replace the underscore with any other character. e.g. + or - or =
Lists all installed kernels minus the current one. This is useful to uninstall older kernels that take too much space on /boot partition. Show Sample Output
Using the --table-truncate ( -T ) option, you can specify the columns you will allow to be truncated. This helps when you have some columns that are unusually long, or a small terminal window. In this example we will print out the /etc/passwd file in columns. We are using a colon as our separator ( -s: ), defining that we want table output ( -t ), defining the column names ( -N ) and allowing the column NAME to be truncated ( -T ). Show Sample Output
Replaces A with B in binary file "orig" and saves the result to "new". You must have the hex representations of A & B. Try od: echo -e "A\c" | od -An -x
add this alias in .bashrc to fast check the ip address of your modem router alias myip="curl -s http://myip.dk | grep '' | sed -e 's/]*>//g'" Show Sample Output
queries local memcached for stats, calculates hit/get ratio and prints it out. Show Sample Output
Does not necessarily require a file to process, it can be used in a pipe as well:
cat filename | sed -e :a -e 's/\(.*[0-9]\)\([0-9]\{3\}\)/\1,\2/;ta'
I don't remember where I copy/pasted this from, I wish I credited the original author
Show Sample Output
If you're like me and want to keep all your music rated, and you use xmms2, you might like this command. I takes 10 random songs from your xmms2 library that don't have any rating, and adds them to your current playlist. You can then rate them in another xmms2 client that supports rating (I like kuechenstation). I'm pretty sure there's a better way to do the grep ... | sed ... part, probably with awk, but I don't know awk, so I'd welcome any suggestions. Show Sample Output
And then to complete the task:
Go to target host;
ssh host
Turn everything off:
for i in `chkconfig --list | fgrep :on | awk '{print $1}'` ; do chkconfig --level 12345 $i off; done
Create duplicate config:
while read line; do chkconfig --level $line on; done < foo
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