Difference between revisions of "I2rda Course Cheatsheet"
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
* <code>ctrl+l,K</code>: abandon current session. It will be lost. | * <code>ctrl+l,K</code>: abandon current session. It will be lost. | ||
* <code>ctrl+l,ESC</code>: enter scroll or copy mode. <code>PgUp</code> an <code>PgDn</code> will now work. <code>Esc</code> to get out. | * <code>ctrl+l,ESC</code>: enter scroll or copy mode. <code>PgUp</code> an <code>PgDn</code> will now work. <code>Esc</code> to get out. | ||
+ | One thing to note with <code>screen</code> and scolling up and down through past pages of long output, it is not direct, you need: | ||
+ | * ctrl+l,<code>Esc</code>, then you can use the <code>PgUp</code> and <code>PgDn</code>. To get our of this scroll or copy-mode as it's called, <code>Esc</code>. | ||
= Graphical programs = | = Graphical programs = |
Latest revision as of 18:29, 11 May 2017
Contents
- 1 Ways of getting out of things
- 2 the module software loading program
- 3 GNU screen program
- 4 Graphical programs
- 5 Command-line Navigation
- 6 Pagers: man, less, vim and R-help
- 7 Linux shortcut symbols
- 8 Keybindings for using the history file
- 9 Using vim
- 10 a fast pdf viewer: xpdf
- 11 IGV Genome browser keys
Ways of getting out of things
- Typing
exit
(the terminal, command-line, queue system, screen program) -
Ctrl+C
, usually interrupts a process -
q()
in R. -
q
in less and xpdf - alt-F4, sometimes for R plots for instance.
-
Ctrl+W
, to close a tab.
the module
software loading program
-
moduleav
to see what's available -
moduleav |grep samtools
to see only those lines containingsamtools
-
module help samtools
, to see any possible help information (samtools
in this case) on the module (not always informative). -
module list
to see your currently loaded software modules -
module load samtools
to load a certain (samtools
in this case) module (Default modules do not need version numbers). -
module unload samtools
to unload a certain (samtools
in this case) module (Default modules do not need version numbers).
GNU screen program
- type
screen
to get in. - type
exit
to get out of your screen sessions -
ctrl+l, n
: cycle through screen windows -
ctrl+l, :hardcopy RET
: create a file with a copy of all inputs and outputs of your session. -
ctrl+l,d
: detach screen session - type
screen -r
to recover a detached session. -
ctrl+l,K
: abandon current session. It will be lost. -
ctrl+l,ESC
: enter scroll or copy mode.PgUp
anPgDn
will now work.Esc
to get out.
One thing to note with screen
and scolling up and down through past pages of long output, it is not direct, you need:
- ctrl+l,
Esc
, then you can use thePgUp
andPgDn
. To get our of this scroll or copy-mode as it's called,Esc
.
Graphical programs
- Note Using graphical programs on the cluster is slow, because very many pixels all have to be sent down the network.
- to view pdf files:
xpdf <file.pdf>
.q
will exit. - to view spreadsheet, tsv or csv files:
gnumeric <file.csv>
.Alt-F4
to get out. - When
R
pops up a plot,Alt-F4
to get out.
(majority of these work both on Unix/Linux command-line and in the R interpreter)
-
ctrl + a
: go to beginning of line -
ctrl + d
: delete a character (useful when used after above) -
ctrl + e
: go to end of line -
alt + b
: move backwards word-wise. -
alt + f
: move backwards word-wise -
alt + d
: delete current word forwards, next word if in space -
ctrl + k
: delete to end of line -
ctrl + w
: delete current word backwards, word behind if in space -
ctrl + y
: yank, or paste most recent deletion (useful when used after above to repeat deletion) -
ctrl + /
: undo changes -
ctrl + x, <BACKSPACE>
: search backwards for a character, here? -
ctrl + r, ?
: search backwards for a character, here?
Pagers: man
, less
, vim
and R
-help
-
q
, to get out again. -
gg
, for top of the page -
G
, for bottom of page -
Ctrl+f
, to advance one page forward. -
Ctrl+b
, to move one page back. -
/
to search, it allows you type in a search term at the bottom. - The
up
,down
,PgUp
andPgDn
keys all work as expected.
Linux shortcut symbols
-
.
the directory you are currently in, often used with mv, cp or ln -s to mean "in here please" -
..
the directory one level above the one you are currently in, aka. the parent directory
- - To change directory to the one above your are in:
cd ..
- To returns to the last directory you were working in before this one:
cd –
- On its own,
cd
bring you to your home directory -
~
shorthand for your home directory, where all your data is kept. -
>
directs output of one command into a file -
|
often called the pipe operator: directs output of one command into another command.
Keybindings for using the history file
-
:<RET>
: save command in history, do not execute. -
!$<RET>
: the final argument of the last command -
!!<RET>
: the entire last command -
!:1-$<RET>
: everthing except the first word of the last command -
!$<RET>
: the final argument of the last command -
^then^now<RET>
: replace the first occurence of then in last command with now -
!!:gs/then/now/<RET>
: replace the ALL occurences of "then" in last command with "now" -
!!:gs/then/now/:p<RET>
: as above except do not execute.
Using vim
- type
vim
to get in, and:q!
to get out without saving. -
ZZ
to save onto to current filename. ":sav fname" otherwise - It opens in "normal" mode which is similar to less, in that direct editing is not expected.
- This is changed by pressing
i
. To get back to normal mode, press theESC
key. - In normal mode
u
undoes any changes -
:
while in normal mode allows command sto be entered - Visual: enabled by "v" or "V" (visual block), sub-box at the bottom open.
- After v or V, movement keys ":%" will operate on whole document, ":’a,’b" operate between two marks, ":42,45" between two line numbers
- search via "/", ":set hlsearch" to see all the hits
Getting by in only normal mode
- movement keys, "w" jump via start of words; "e" jump via ends; "fc" jump to next c
- "0" for start of line, "A" for end of line and into insert mode
- "x" delete current character, "xp" switch positions of current and next character
- "yyp" copy current line and paste it underneath
- "dd" delete line, "2d" delete this and following two lines. "dgg" delete to start, "dG" delete to end
- "dw" delete current word
- Command: Activated by ":", sub-box at the bottom open, rich command language
- Visual: Activated by
v
orctrl+v
(visual block), sub-box at the bottom open, rich command language
Advanced but really useful commands
-
:colorscheme desert
change to the desert colour scheme, there are many others:morning
,delek
. -
:%s/snooze/sneeze/gc
also works -
:g/sneeze/d delete all lines without sneeze"
-
:v/sneeze/d delete all lines with sneeze"
- ":42y[RET]p" paste line 42
- "d214G" delete up to line 214
- "y214G" copy up to line 214
-
:set list
, all non-printing characters are also shown. -
:set hlsearch
, will highlight all search occurrences. -
:set nu
, show line numbers.
a fast pdf viewer: xpdf
-
xpdf mypdffile.pdf
opensmypdffile.pdf
using the X11 graphical system -
q
to get out -
+
to maker bigger -
-
to make smaller -
Spacebar
for bottom of page -
n
for next page -
p
for previous page -
alt+f
toggle for full screen and back
IGV Genome browser keys
- ctrl-R Defines the region currently in view as a region of interest.
- ctrl-F/ctrl-B Skip forward to the next feature and back to the last feature.
- ctrl-shift-F/ctrl-shift-B If you have the feature track expanded and have selected one of the rows, this will skip forward to the next exon or back to the last exon.
- alt-left/alt-right, move you back and forward through your IGV history.
- Arrow-keys Pans left, right, up, and down in the current chromosome.
- Home/End-keys Skips to the page top or bottom of the current view, then pages right or left respectively.
- PageUp/PageDown-keys Pages up and down the current view.