Beginner's Guide To The Linux Terminal

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • I've been receiving a lot of questions from new Linux users that want to learn the terminal and the command line. One viewer recently asked me if there was one video of mine that he could watch to learn this stuff. And I don't really have a video that is comprehensive and that is aimed for absolute beginner's to the terminal. So I'm making that video now...
    REFERENCED:
    ► www.gnu.org/software/bash/man... - Bash Manual
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    Your support is very much appreciated. Thanks, guys!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 385

  • @dam0ne
    @dam0ne Před 3 lety +513

    Table of contents:
    0:58 Opening the terminal
    1:20 Zooming on the terminal
    2:00 Print working directory - pwd
    2:34 Change directory - cd
    4:18 Clearing the screen - clear / Control+l
    4:45 List contents of directories - ls
    7:12 Manual pages - man
    8:07 Creating files - touch
    9:30 Showing file contents - cat
    9:49 Creating directories - mkdir
    10:23 Moving files - mv
    11:36 Copying files - cp
    12:14 Removing files - rm
    13:05 Removing directories - rmdir
    13:30 Removing not empty directories - rm -rf
    15:06 Finding program binaries - which / whereis
    16:29 Finding files in filesystem - locate / mlocate / find
    17:54 Printing text - echo
    19:21 Printing text - printf
    21:26 Cat from the top of a file - less
    22:00 Finding strings of text in a file - grep
    22:50 Piping program outputs - |
    23:19 Find and replace strings - sed
    25:38 Printing first or last lines of a file - head / tail
    26:54 File permissions - chmod
    29:50 Console command history - history
    30:43 Repeat last command - !!
    31:56 Closing programs - kill / killall / xkill
    33:20 Closing programs - htop
    34:22 Testing connection - ping
    35:11 Downloading things - wget
    35:51 Getting the date - date
    36:18 Calendar - cal
    36:23 Calculator - bc
    36:56 Configuring shell aliases - .bashrc editing
    38:21 Updating Debian-based systems - apt update && apt upgrade

    • @toufiknopixl9973
      @toufiknopixl9973 Před 3 lety +16

      You're a hero

    • @JessicaFEREM
      @JessicaFEREM Před 3 lety +21

      hey DT, copy and paste this into the description, after some time, it'll pop up as a chapter select on youtube.

    • @pop4ti
      @pop4ti Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you!

    • @14u2ponder
      @14u2ponder Před 2 lety

      I don't think kill, chmod, wget, sed, ping, aliases, are beginners subjects. I also think you should include something about ed (or how to make a file).

    • @keylanoslokj1806
      @keylanoslokj1806 Před 2 lety

      At around 40:00 when creating the "aptup" alias, the system recommended i don't do it there directly, but at a seperate bash aliases file. Can you do a tutorial on how to do that?

  • @raymondgradzewicz
    @raymondgradzewicz Před 3 lety +212

    Do I already know how to use the terminal? Yes.
    Am I still going to watch the video? Yes.

    • @kevyyar
      @kevyyar Před 3 lety +5

      Lol I feel the same way

    • @favor94
      @favor94 Před 3 lety +1

      @Learn Linux this thing sometimes happen with me, thats why i watch any tutorial pops out on my timeline

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 3 lety +3

      Well, u just learned that `rmdir` exists. Been using `tree $dir`, `rm -r $dir` untill now…

    • @raymondgradzewicz
      @raymondgradzewicz Před 3 lety

      @@mskiptr I actually knew that one already.

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 3 lety

      @@raymondgradzewicz *I
      Sorry for that typo; indeed quite misleading

  • @amjedbelgacem8218
    @amjedbelgacem8218 Před 2 lety +139

    this 42 min long video is literally worth a 4 hours lecture at the university, great delivery, simple and straight to the point.
    you earned a sub, keep the good work !

    • @zhaadd
      @zhaadd Před 2 lety +9

      university is very redundant in almost everything tbh

    • @amjedbelgacem8218
      @amjedbelgacem8218 Před 2 lety +4

      @@zhaadd couldn’t agree more

    • @im-a-trailblazer
      @im-a-trailblazer Před rokem +1

      I think even more, the way he lays out the difference and best use cases for cat, less and grep for example. Could be a multi day or week dive into getting to grips with everything. He also earned me as a sub. I am not using arch btw

  • @chrishayward3520
    @chrishayward3520 Před 3 lety +61

    Those chips were just teasing me the whole time! I'm ready for the party size!

    • @DistroTube
      @DistroTube  Před 3 lety +33

      Shortly after recording this, I plunged headfirst into that bag of Lay's. I should know better than to buy the big Family Size bags of chips.

    • @guyincognito5663
      @guyincognito5663 Před 3 lety +8

      “I’ll just eat a couple and leave some for later”
      Sure you will.

    • @curvesoftcomputerco.9928
      @curvesoftcomputerco.9928 Před 2 lety +1

      @@DistroTube Nothing like a classic Lay's though. Lol!

  • @josephsagotti8786
    @josephsagotti8786 Před 3 lety +53

    We need some of these every once in a while

  • @akirubamiru6700
    @akirubamiru6700 Před 3 lety +77

    Derek that a great video not for beginner but also good for revision although could you do stamps times? Thank you Derek!

  • @LinuxClassroom
    @LinuxClassroom Před 3 lety +122

    Having taught Linux for several years now, most students really struggle with paths. It seems to be so abstract for many beginners.

    • @LinuxClassroom
      @LinuxClassroom Před 3 lety +7

      @Learn Linux Absolutely! I love my job.

    • @sigmundfreud4472
      @sigmundfreud4472 Před 3 lety +1

      😍

    • @BlackHawk2029
      @BlackHawk2029 Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah the Linux file system is REALLY foreign for anyone coming from another OS. I'm 6 months in running Kubuntu as my primary OS and I still struggle with it occasionally.

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před 3 lety +1

      @Learn Linux whats so hard about it?

    • @jon-h
      @jon-h Před 2 lety +3

      @Terminalforlife (LL) Windows is actually the only outlier as far as PC OS are concerned.
      BSD-Unix, GNU/Linux, GNU/Hurd and MacOS are all filesystem hierarchy compliant.
      MacOS is just very clever to hide this fact from the user.
      If you have trouble with the filesystem hierarchy, I'd urge you to read the reference documentation:
      refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/fhs
      It goes into great detail about not only where everything is, but also why it is where it is specifically.

  • @famailiaanima
    @famailiaanima Před 3 lety +24

    00:04 gnew subscribers lol

  • @ShaunakHub
    @ShaunakHub Před 3 lety +5

    An excellent video. Will be immensely helpful for new users.
    Really appreciate the work you doing for everyone.
    Thankfully I was never scared of the Terminal as I come from the MS-DOS days 😀

  • @sebastianucero7535
    @sebastianucero7535 Před rokem

    A very packed but most useful video on the Terminal so far. Thank You so so much.

  • @XGames_Mrated
    @XGames_Mrated Před 2 lety +1

    This was really encouraging to watch. Really helpful to improve my work

  • @Prophet6000
    @Prophet6000 Před 3 lety +5

    This is a great video i just started learning and understanding the terminal this week.

  • @spectregaming1888
    @spectregaming1888 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic work! Great information and pacing. Thank you

  • @AgentFortySeven47
    @AgentFortySeven47 Před 2 lety +12

    DT you are the best Linux teacher I could ever ask for. This is such a helpful guide to the Linux terminal and you go at a really good pace. You explain things in a very clear way and I find this tutorial very easy to follow. Keep up the amazing work!

  • @SearchFT
    @SearchFT Před 3 lety +4

    In less than 5min you tought me more than I expected. Thanks a lot for this video. Will rewatch it a few times, making notes 🙏

  • @2009researcher
    @2009researcher Před 5 měsíci +2

    I applaud channels like this.
    Here's why.
    These resources are introducing people to our other options.
    I converted my computers to Linux a while back.
    I have no regrets at all.
    I got tired of questionable operating system behavior which included ads and popups.
    Since I put Linux MX on some machines and Linux Zorin on others, I'm experiencing nice tight operating systems that 'I' can trust. No ads. No popups. No operating system stubbornness.
    It just works!
    In my case, I had another observation. The amount of time I'd observe how often my hard drive and internet lights would be working when nobody is using the machines. With Linux I don't see this activity with these lights.
    An occasional flicker or two, but no 10 minute sessions of watching these lights showing activity.
    I'm fond of Linux MX because it lets you change the OS system Icon images.
    I put my business logo on the start button.
    I'm a very happy Linux user.
    Very happy. 👍

  • @aronwomack359
    @aronwomack359 Před 2 lety +1

    Love your videos man, you got me wanting to try Arch out. I'm running windows 11, and Ubuntu on a cheap laptop, and your videos have been priceless.

  • @Soochoup
    @Soochoup Před rokem +3

    Solid tutorial; Not a beginner but discovered a thing or two. Never hurts to go back to the basics !

  • @NerdPowah
    @NerdPowah Před 2 lety +1

    Good stuff. I was able to learn a thing or two even though I've been using linux for quite awhile now. Really cool that you covered bc. One of my college professors actually helped write it!

  • @ChuckLandry
    @ChuckLandry Před 2 lety

    Just found this video and first time seeing your channel. VERY easy to follow and great information for someone new like me. Thank you!

  • @RiKo-uh9ot
    @RiKo-uh9ot Před 2 lety +1

    Great video, haven't finished it yet, but I really wanted to leave a good feed-back here. So far so good.

  • @noahlomax1
    @noahlomax1 Před 10 měsíci +1

    This is one of the GREATEST beginner Linux tutorials on CZcams. Thank you very much for this course of yours, sir. I've also subscribed for more.

  • @jakealbertson1130
    @jakealbertson1130 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you. New to Linux and this answered a lot of questions I had.

  • @italinhorn4455
    @italinhorn4455 Před 3 lety +1

    Yooo DT thanks for the video I just got into recently so this is a great help.

  • @glenngenoway7990
    @glenngenoway7990 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for that teaching! I'm one of those who will be reviewing this information several times as I learn to use the command line.

  • @darylwayne611
    @darylwayne611 Před rokem +1

    Awesome video! You made this so easy to learn! Thank you!

  • @origenadamantine7875
    @origenadamantine7875 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks so much DT! This is terrific.

  • @ScottKentEdu
    @ScottKentEdu Před rokem +1

    This was awesome. Thank you for the video. Made so much more sense than trying to figure it out on my own.

  • @MrMiroto
    @MrMiroto Před rokem

    Wow. On point, very dense information. Great work!

  • @tikutiku2368
    @tikutiku2368 Před 2 lety +2

    State-of-the-art tutorial. Thanks for sharing!😎

  • @cgcauldron5427
    @cgcauldron5427 Před 11 měsíci

    Epic! I've gone through many other tuts, and this one is way on top. Thx a lot!

  • @NomdePlume337
    @NomdePlume337 Před rokem +1

    I’ve been learning Linux for the last couple weeks and this is by far the best video I’ve found so far

  • @akshatkumargems
    @akshatkumargems Před rokem +2

    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge on Linux terminal for beginners! Your explanations and jokes made the learning process so much more enjoyable and approachable. Your guide was instrumental in helping me get a better understanding of the Linux terminal and I appreciate all the time and effort you put into creating it. Your passion for teaching and commitment to helping others truly shines through. Keep up the great work and I look forward to learning more from you in the future! 💌💌

  • @tylalikesfood
    @tylalikesfood Před rokem

    Extremely useful for a beginner trying to learn to bash in a terminal window, really needed this for work as I'm expected to handle linux and ubuntu OS based systems.

  • @pawel4099
    @pawel4099 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks a lot. I went linux(mint)-only like 3 moths ago and still not properly aquired basic bash so this video is EXACTLY what i needed ;)

  • @im-a-trailblazer
    @im-a-trailblazer Před rokem +1

    I literally changed this comment 3 times. This is exactly the video i was looking for. U answered a lot of questions i had about commands in the terminal i built up the last weeks. Great stuff man love it.

  • @busyrand
    @busyrand Před rokem

    Thank you abundantly for this thorough, grounded instruction... This program was a joy to work through. Lots of my fears were relieved and I'm no longer walking on eggshells as a new Linux Mint user... I have previous experience with Windows Subsystem for Linux for a couple years, bu this is still a different animal with a new file system. Well done.

  • @user-yy2zz7wk1z
    @user-yy2zz7wk1z Před rokem

    Run "man intro", it's a great intro (obviously) to using the Terminal. "info" is good on systems that support it but a bit harder to move around navigate. "man man" is another good place to start, and then from there "man command" (insert any command to learn about). Also "cd --help" or "command --help" is a good cheat sheet. depending your shell (most often bash), "man bash" will get more in depth. "man zsh" would be for the ZSH shell. If you want a bonus to take things to the next next level. Full screen your terminal, get rid of any menu bars or scrollbars, and then run "byobu" to get a terminal multiplexer (window manager) to split the terminal, have multiple tabs, print system info on status bar, pretty much a terminal based GUI so you aren't stuck in a single shell and can start multitasking similar to having multiple GUI windows open but way more efficient and hacker--ish haha.

  • @michaelpezzulo4413
    @michaelpezzulo4413 Před rokem +1

    It has been 3 1/2 years since my intro to Linux course, and this is a great review.

  • @daftmario123
    @daftmario123 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks dude, this was helpful. I've used Linux in the past and executed commands in the terminal, but I would just copy/paste the commands and not really understand what they meant or what exactly was going on. This helped fill in the gaps I had.

  • @joshstrawder
    @joshstrawder Před 3 lety +3

    I’ve learned more about using Linux from this channel than I have about just customizing Linux...

  • @MRC_MRC
    @MRC_MRC Před 10 měsíci +1

    you're an amazing teacher, in a first 4 minutes I learned more that other 20 minutes videos

  • @sijomatheweleppumkal
    @sijomatheweleppumkal Před rokem

    Configuring shell aliases - awesome ! Thank you, dear...

  • @johnstath9666
    @johnstath9666 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Distro. Awesome presentation!!

  • @realtimestatic
    @realtimestatic Před 3 lety +7

    Terminal meme man isn’t real he can’t hurt you
    Terminal meme man: 24:03

  • @currentlykent4593
    @currentlykent4593 Před 3 lety +2

    Getting into this at the ripe age of 36. This was extremely helpful. Much obliged.

  • @MelsRNRETRO
    @MelsRNRETRO Před rokem

    Been Interested in learning Linux and your video is Excellent. TYVM 🤠

  • @NemoOhd20
    @NemoOhd20 Před 2 měsíci

    Love the video and love this channel. Thanks!

  • @BrewmasterN8
    @BrewmasterN8 Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome video man! Nice pace and good info.
    Thabk you. Im in...

  • @SuperCapello1
    @SuperCapello1 Před 2 lety

    Superb, straight to the point video. Thumbs up.

  • @kardelenaydogan3793
    @kardelenaydogan3793 Před 10 měsíci

    i cant thank you enough for this video. i just started the odin project, installed a dual boot but the linux terminal always confused me. i just watched your video and the way you teach is excellent!!! thank you so much.

  • @BrewmasterN8
    @BrewmasterN8 Před 8 měsíci

    41:45 I wanna thank these folks too thank you for making it possible

  • @chris-terrell-liveactive
    @chris-terrell-liveactive Před 5 měsíci

    Very helpful as I begin working with Linux, i haven't seen anything else on using terminal commands so this is an excellent reference thank you.

  • @PELVIS361
    @PELVIS361 Před rokem

    This is great!
    Finally some explanations!
    Thanks 🙏

  • @giovannikomis9805
    @giovannikomis9805 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Excellent work, one of the best tutorials about beginning learn Linux.

  • @jasonk4442
    @jasonk4442 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you very much you are very easy to follow along with you should do entire sets of terminal tutorials heck I would even pay for them.

  • @Valkebab
    @Valkebab Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much! I'm very new to Linux and this helped me a lot

  • @ageema
    @ageema Před 2 lety +1

    Derek Taylor, You are a hero! This is tutorial works for us os x folks too.

  • @abdourahman87
    @abdourahman87 Před rokem +1

    I absolutely recommend anyone new top linux to watch this video.Its covers most of if not all the basic commands of the terminal Thanks DT☺

  • @cireeric
    @cireeric Před rokem +1

    Great explanation! This really helps!

  • @sambathleluyer640
    @sambathleluyer640 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot. This is valuable for me, a new beginner into Linux Realm.

  • @xk2102
    @xk2102 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you DT!
    (for your keeping (me) company and your videos i've been binge-watching, not just this one..!)

  • @aloucks8
    @aloucks8 Před 3 lety +2

    This is a perfect video for learning Bash

  • @testchannel-ignore9559
    @testchannel-ignore9559 Před 8 měsíci

    What you said about moving, copying, creating deleting files via a terminal is so true. I liked the tip about asking beginners to re-watch, and try the commands. Of course I am an old hat at this, but was looking for a video for co-workers.

  • @yashpandey350
    @yashpandey350 Před 2 lety +3

    alias commands are dope, I am in love with alias commands literally I'm using them daily for a lot of tasks.

    • @yashpandey350
      @yashpandey350 Před rokem

      @@etishome4099 Think in this way, I have multiple projects and I have distributed in separate folder so instead of cd .... I can simply make an alias for projects, fronted projects, backend, movies.....When you have few things its okay to avoid but when your work is in different folders everyday you need alias for that.🙂🙂🙂🙂

    • @yashpandey350
      @yashpandey350 Před rokem

      @@etishome4099 I know most of the cmd command bro, Sorry I misjudged the question. 😊😊😊😊

  • @INhumanLAST
    @INhumanLAST Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the great tutorials , thanks to you I really learnt the use of terminal and vim
    Linux is fun again. Please share more fun things

  • @poisonpotato1
    @poisonpotato1 Před rokem +2

    This brings me back to 2014. Freshman year of college we had to learn all of this in a required course that was prerequisite for every engineering major

  • @lumar5233
    @lumar5233 Před 3 lety +1

    I use LinuxMint 20.1 XFCE and the terminal
    app that came with Linux on my old Toshiba.
    To increase the text size on my terminal,
    I had to press the CTRL key and the SHIFT
    key together and tap the + key.
    When I pressed only the CTRL key and tapped
    the + key, the = sign would show on the
    command line.
    Using only the CTRL key and tapping the minus
    key, the text would become smaller.
    I am using a Toshiba Satellite C55-B5250,
    bought around 2015.
    Thanks for the easy to follow terminal video.
    :

  • @kiwon1974
    @kiwon1974 Před 3 lety +3

    Really nice, using Linux for 2 months and learned 3,4 commands. Could you please do a intermediary guide too?

  • @0marfans
    @0marfans Před 3 lety +3

    This was fantastic, thank you!

  • @s-o-o-z
    @s-o-o-z Před 2 lety

    This was extremely helpful. Thank you

  • @rickcea1017
    @rickcea1017 Před 5 měsíci

    Really great tutorial! Thanks!!!

  • @dawitsolomon2119
    @dawitsolomon2119 Před 2 lety +1

    sincerely Thank you ,this is eye opening .

  • @HikingFeral
    @HikingFeral Před 2 lety

    Just what i was looking for, thanks.

  • @petergeorgiev6876
    @petergeorgiev6876 Před 3 lety

    Well finally something meaningful... Congrats on this video!

  • @ivyndane10
    @ivyndane10 Před 5 měsíci

    My first day watching linux commands after ccna certification just picking one or two commands thanks very much

  • @dmays67
    @dmays67 Před 2 lety

    11min in and already learning new stuff. Nice!

  • @bobwright8000
    @bobwright8000 Před 3 lety +17

    Linux has been my daily driver for years, but I watched this just to see if there was anything I could learn. Sure enough, I have always used "cd .." to go up a directory. I never knew "cd -" would work also. Great job.

    • @dandandrorivolleyball
      @dandandrorivolleyball Před 3 lety +3

      I mapped "cd .." to ".." in my bash_aliases a few months back and it feels amazing!
      I also love the shopt auto cd option in bash that lets me write the directory name without cd before it and it just cd's into it :)

    • @dandandrorivolleyball
      @dandandrorivolleyball Před 3 lety +2

      Sorry, the command that lets you cd without typing "cd" is shopt -s autocd

    • @kiiikoooPT
      @kiiikoooPT Před 2 lety

      yeap that is a windows thing I think, I also use that to go back and cd . go back to root :)

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před rokem +2

      cd - doesnt take u up one dir, it takes u back to which directory you were before this one. and that might be up / down / side / anywhere.
      example, say i am in abc/def
      and you `cd xyz/uvw`. then `cd -` will bring you to that abc/def path, not xyz like cd .. would

    • @bobwright8000
      @bobwright8000 Před rokem +2

      @@yash1152 Thanks Yash

  • @h2o40fpv
    @h2o40fpv Před rokem

    Great stuff DT

  • @mojommojom7098
    @mojommojom7098 Před 7 měsíci

    +1 to the previous comment, earned a sub because of this video. Great delivery and straight to the point. Thx

  • @jtjones4727
    @jtjones4727 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow this is an awesome video. I'm not a linux beginner by any means, but I'm no advanced user either. Maybe intermediate. Anyhow, this was great. Just started the video a few mins back and I've already learned some basic things I should have already known, but somehow missed. Thanks.

  • @Magnetron692
    @Magnetron692 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Derek, many thanks! Dankeschön from Germany 😃👍🏻 Best wishes, Ralf

  • @clausmartini1074
    @clausmartini1074 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video DT

  • @adityaraj-vu1jr
    @adityaraj-vu1jr Před 2 lety

    just moved to Mac from windows been a great help, thanks.

  • @PinakiGupta82Appu
    @PinakiGupta82Appu Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent. It should help a lot of newcomers. 👍

  • @rapunzel_one_love
    @rapunzel_one_love Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you sooooo much! Best channel to learn linux😊

  • @rizzrak
    @rizzrak Před 9 měsíci

    I just started using Linux and this is very helpful!

  • @StefanoVerugi
    @StefanoVerugi Před 2 lety

    this video is for me a real treasure
    thanks

  • @richardtwyning
    @richardtwyning Před 3 lety

    I've been using Linux at home on all my machines for ten years, but I always enjoy videos on using the terminal. You can ALWAYS learn a new trick or two, even after ten years :-)

  • @irascib1e
    @irascib1e Před 2 lety +1

    my favorite unintentional ASMR video. Linux tips are good too

  • @marcuantoniu8872
    @marcuantoniu8872 Před 3 lety +1

    thank you man you've helped me a lot

  • @ot0b
    @ot0b Před rokem

    I installed linux for the first time & this was fun. Thanks.

  • @KingBawb-wg3jo
    @KingBawb-wg3jo Před 3 lety +2

    Loved the video. I guess since I knew all these I'm no longer a beginner...lol yeah right. Still a beginner. I also would've also added "cd .." to go back one directory. At least I use that one a lot.

  • @ghostskills
    @ghostskills Před rokem

    that one helped me very much! thank u sir!

  • @apereirafernandez
    @apereirafernandez Před 3 lety +1

    Beautiful tutorial!

  • @noam65
    @noam65 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey DT, I was a Unix system admin for many years. I got my first taste of it 34 years ago. I knew most of this, but you still managed to teach me a few new tricks. Thanks.
    You missed your calling... I know you like retail a lot, but you are also an awesome teacher/trainer. That is a rare skill. Kudos!

  • @Colaholiker
    @Colaholiker Před 2 lety

    I have been using Linux for a long time in parallel with Windows and exclusively for more than one and a half yearas, but I didn't know that there is a printf command. I am familiar with printf as a c function, but it was this video that taught me about the Linux command with the same name.

  • @gimcrack555
    @gimcrack555 Před 2 lety +1

    The first commands that I learned. I always called them navigation commands. Which is the main commands you run daily. People always ask how can you remember these commands. Well repetition for one thing. I always start with 10 commands. Learn them well, until it's burn into memory. Then go to the next 10 commands. Repeat until you get to 100 commands by heart.

  • @seiji7042
    @seiji7042 Před rokem

    Very useful for me. Thanks! from Japan.

  • @deadmagnet6318
    @deadmagnet6318 Před 2 lety

    Super useful stuff ( thanks for the help)