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Asked: April 18, 20182018-04-18T10:04:59+00:00 2018-04-18T10:04:59+00:00In: 1. WordPress Hosting, 1.1. Linux Nutshell, 2. Linux Hosting, 2.1. Linux Nutshell, Knowledge Base

Linux Cookbook – Recipe 1.1 Introduction

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Documentation for Linux programs is abundant?

Problem

Documentation for Linux programs is abundant. Finding it can be a
bit challenging, though. You’re not going to find lots of sleek, glossy
printed manuals, because most Linux software is distributed online,
rather than in shiny boxed sets?

1. Linux AuthorCarla Schroder
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  1. Carla Schroder
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    Carla Schroder
    2018-04-18T10:06:03+00:00Added an answer on April 18, 2018 at 10:06 am

    Solution

    There’s another difficulty, too: Linux follows the grand Unix tradition
    of small, specialized programs working cooperatively, so any Linux
    distribution contains a large number of individual programs. For
    example, Tom’s Root Boot, “The most GNU/Linux on one floppy disk,”
    contains over 230 separate, individual programs on a single 3.5”
    diskette. A general-purpose distribution such as Mandrake or SuSE
    contains several thousand programs and there are over 12,000
    packages in the Debian repositories. While organizing and
    maintaining a printed library presents some difficulties, the good
    news is that all of these things are documented. Whatever you want
    to know, there is a way to find it.
    1.1.1 man and info: The Universal Linux Manuals
    Almost every program written for Linux has a man page. They’re
    usually not the best teaching tool for newbies. Their purpose is to
    document the command syntax and every command option, and to
    be universally available. No matter what kind of strange desert-island
    scenario you may find yourself in, there will always be man pages.
    And because man pages are incorporated into the programs to which
    they belong, you’ll find that only installed programs have man pages
    and that the versions of those pages are pertinent to your system.
    info pages tend to be more verbose than man pages and are
    hyperlinked. The hyperlinks navigate to the various nodes, or
    chapters, inside the document and to cross-references in other info
    pages. Many info pages are simply reformatted man pages. But in
    some instancesprimarily the GNU project programsthe info pages are
    more detailed, containing tutorials and extensive examples.
    1.1.2 Other Documentation
    A large number of README, CHANGELOGS, RELEASE NOTES,
    COPYRIGHT, INSTALL, integrated Help systems, and HTML docs are
    going to be squirreled away in various locations on your system. Yes,
    it’s a jumble. Don’t worry, you’ll learn easy ways to find all these
    things in this chapter, including a nice Python script to do the finding
    for you.
    There are many web sites that host complete archives of man and
    info pages, which comes in handy if your system is missing the ones
    you want, or you want to read them without having to download and
    install new programs. A Google search will find them quickly.
    The commercial Linux distributionsfor example, Red Hat, SuSE,
    Mandrake, Xandros, and Linspiresupply excellent user manuals. Every
    major Linux distribution provides a feast of online resources. Search
    engines, user mailing lists, Usenet, and all sorts of Linux web sites
    also supply a wealth of help and information.
    1.1.3 Graphical Viewers
    There are several good graphical man and info page viewers:
    Konqueror
    The web and file browser in KDE also contains an excellent man
    and info page viewer. Simply type man:foo or info:/foo in the
    address bar. It is easy to print from Konqueror, and easy to
    select individual man or info pages for printing.
    Yelp
    The Gnome viewer. Displays man and info pages, and Gnome’s
    help documents. It is indexed and searchable.
    Pinfo
    A nice ncurses-based info and man viewer for the console.
    Users can add new documents to it, and it supports regexp
    searches.

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