Re: [Lutecium-group] séminaires AFI au format P DF
Dans un e-mail dat? du 07/01/2005 10:44:13 Paris, Madrid, laurentsauerwein at mac.com a ?crit :
lutecium-group: Document interne au Groupe de Travail Lutecium. Ne doit pas etre diffuse hors du groupe. ---
Le 7 janv. 05, ? 10:29, Brillacaciaa at aol.com a ?crit :
et naturellement il y a le grep de l'unix inclus dans macos X
K?sako ?
- LS
extrait du livre Mac OS X Power Hound, (par exemple) ---- In Mac OS X Power Hound, creator and editor of the extremely popular Mac OS X Hints Web site (http://www.macosxhints.com) Rob Griffiths lifts the hood on the Formula-One-powered operating system and delivers over 500 high-octane secrets for finding easier, faster, and better ways of using Panther and the programs that come with it--and even a bunch that don't. He includes chapters on Unix, the engine under Mac OS X's hood ---- Chapter 15. Useful Unix Hints For some, the Unix engine at the heart of Mac OS X may seem completely foreign, intimidating, and even unnecessary. To this end, you're forgiven if the presence, in this day and age, of a command line?a system of controlling the Mac by typing cryptic commands instead of using menus?strikes you as a blast from the DOS-ridden past. And you'd have good company. The vast majority of Mac OS X fans live long, happy lives without ever touching Terminal or even realizing that the Mac OS X sports car rides on Unix, a venerable, highly polished, 30-year-old chassis. But an extremely important minority lives, eats, and sleeps in Terminal. This program is where the more advanced crowd of major-league geeks compiles open-source programs, connects to remote computers, and performs magic with strings of commands like grep, sed, and awk. These people enjoy a world of power and control usually enjoyed only by dictators and Hollywood stars. They're the people who, admiring the handsome plumbing of Mac OS X, are writing cool new programs for it, introducing it to corporations, and getting their own work done much faster. This chapter and the next are dedicated to helping you maximize the many benefits of Terminal (which awaits in your Applications Utilities folder). Some of the tricks are simple enough for anybody; others require some experience in Unix. All of them, however, involve Terminal.
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Brillacaciaa@aol.com