Difference between revisions of "Linux Cheat Sheet"
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
This Page is for a Cheat Sheet of Linux commands. | This Page is for a Cheat Sheet of Linux commands. | ||
| − | Overwrite File with specific content/string: | + | |
| + | == Overwrite File with specific content/string: == | ||
''echo "<string>" > <filename>'' | ''echo "<string>" > <filename>'' | ||
| + | ''printf "<string>"" > <filename>'' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Beispiel: | ||
| + | ''echo "hello" > beispiel.txt'' | ||
| + | ''printf "hello" > beispiel.txt'' | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Append File with specific content/string: == | ||
| + | |||
| + | ''echo "<string>" >> <filename>'' | ||
| + | ''printf "<string>"" >> <filename>'' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Beispiel: | ||
| + | ''echo "hello" >> beispiel.txt'' | ||
| + | ''printf "hello" >> beispiel.txt'' | ||
Revision as of 08:00, 29 January 2025
This Page is for a Cheat Sheet of Linux commands.
Overwrite File with specific content/string:
echo "<string>" > <filename> printf "<string>"" > <filename>
Beispiel: echo "hello" > beispiel.txt printf "hello" > beispiel.txt
Append File with specific content/string:
echo "<string>" >> <filename> printf "<string>"" >> <filename>
Beispiel: echo "hello" >> beispiel.txt printf "hello" >> beispiel.txt