• lemmyreader@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    Well I never used command line in 30 years of Windows.

    That’s 30 years of using closed source software from strangers (Or do you have many good friends at Redmond WA USA ?) :-)

    It’s pretty much a requirement for Linux that you copy and paste random commands you don’t understand from strangers on the internet.

    Maybe decades ago it was. Nowadays that’s not a requirement as there’s GUI applications for a lot more things than before. And as a Linux user I simply find it much more convenient and faster to share some commands with another person than making screen shots and creating a howto of a few pages or making a video. Also documentation has improved. For the average Linux user the Arch Linux wiki is a nice resource, even when not using Arch Linux.

    • ÚwÙ-Passwort@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Funnylie enough, if im not doing programmer/networking stuff, there are only 3 reasons to open a terminal

      • run a script, because mousepad likes to open them
      • run pacman, because pamac broke again
      • checking the error log, because updates or playing around broke something
      • RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 months ago

        Websites offer that but you can usually find those in your favorite package manager Downloading software from shady websites is the Windows way of doing things.

        Now, to be clear: this discussion is about having to use the terminal and that’s what people answered. You still find so many resources referring to the terminal because it’s often just the most convenient and effective way to do something.

        I certainly prefer it over clicking through settings or running dedicated tools to do something that could be solved by a single line. And I was an exclusive Windows user like 5 years ago.