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Docker Compose到Docker运行转换器
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Docker Compose验证器
Docker运行到Kubernetes
Docker运行到Quadlets转换器
Docker运行命令转Docker Compose转换器
Traefik Docker Compose生成器
CSV转JSON
JQ/JSONPath测试器
JSON压缩器
JSON合并器
JSON大小分析器
JSON字符串转换器
JSON展开/嵌套化工具
JSON差异比较
JSON排序大师
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JSON格式化与美化
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JSON转TS(TypeScript)
JSON转XML
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JSON转义器/反转义器
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JSON转模式
JS转JSON转换器
PHP数组转JSON
TOML转JSON
HTML转Markdown
Markdown目录生成器
Markdown编辑器
Markdown转HTML
粘贴为Markdown
PDF加密
PDF合并工具
PDF文本提取工具
PDF签名检查器
PDF线性化/FastWeb
PDF解密和解锁
PDF页面提取工具
XML格式化器
XML转JSON
XPath测试器
XSLT测试工具
TOML转YAML
YAML合并器
YAML展开/嵌套化工具
YAML格式化与美化
YAML转JSON转换器
YAML转TOML
GitHub文件下载加速
今日新闻热榜聚合
每日早报
AGE密码学
Ansible Vault加密解密
Bcrypt
CRC计算器
CSR生成器
ECDSA密钥对生成器
Ed25519密钥对生成器
HMAC生成器
JWT生成器
JWT解析器
PGP加密
PGP密钥对生成器
Paseto/PASERK公私钥工具
Paseto/PASERK本地工具
RSA/DSA/ECDSA签名器与验证器
RSA加密
RSA密钥对生成器
SSL证书转换器
X.509证书生成器
加密/解密文本
文件哈希器
文本哈希工具
证书/密钥解析器
Active Directory LDAP属性搜索器
Cookie解析器
DMARC报告分析器
GZip/Deflate转换器
MIME编码转换器
MongoDB ObjectId转换器
Outlook MSG解析器
Outlook安全链接解码器
Parquet文件读取器
SMART原始值转换器
SharePoint分享链接解码器
Snowflake ID提取器
Tcpdump命令生成器
URL解析器
十六进制编码器/解码器
敏感数据掩码器
文件类型检测器
浮点数转换器
电子邮件解析器
退信邮件解析器
键码信息
HEIC转换器
ICO/PNG转换器
M3U8视频在线转换MP4下载工具
OCR图像和PDF
m3u8视频在线播放器
图像EXIF/元数据/GPS/JPEG质量读取器
图像格式转换器
图像调整器
图像转SVG(potrace)
图片转 ICO 图标
在线生成圆角照片
在线证件照换背景
摄像头录制器
水印工具
短视频去水印下载工具
移除EXIF
Bash备忘单
CSS选择器备忘单
Docker备忘单
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Git语义提交备忘单
IT技能速查清单
JQ备忘单
JSONPath语法备忘单
K8s备忘单
Markdown备忘单
Nano备忘单
Nginx备忘单
Vim备忘单
WEB标准颜色列表
XPath语法备忘单
中文量化百科
常用正则表达式备忘单
正则表达式备忘单
网页颜色搭配速查表
Mikutap
云音乐热评墙
人生重开模拟器
休闲短视频
卡通头像生成器
毒鸡汤
白噪音促眠
高清电脑壁纸
ANSI转义测试器
API测试器
CLI命令编辑器
Curl转换器
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JSON转Protobuf
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JSON转TypeScript
JavaScript去混淆器/解包器
JavaScript美化器
Open Graph元标签生成器
SQL压缩器
SQL格式化与美化
Swagger UI测试器
代码/脚本高亮工具
堆栈跟踪美化器
字符串转义工具
引号转换器
数据伪造工具
番茄钟计时器
数学OCR
数学格式转换器
数学表达式计算器
BMI计算器
IBAN验证器与解析器
IES照明指南
ISBN验证器与解析器
ISO 3166国家代码搜索器
Luhn验证器
Unicode搜索
人民币大写转换器
增值税号验证器
服务级别协议计算器
电话号码解析与格式化工具
货币转换器
软件许可兼容性检查器
随机数生成器
AI提示分割器
ASCII艺术文本生成器
GPT令牌估计器
Levenshtein计算器
Lorem ipsum生成器
Mermaid导出器
Unicode格式化工具
从HTML提取文本
列表比较器
列表转换器
唯一单词
图像转ASCII艺术
大小写转换器
字符串混淆器
引用生成器
摩尔斯电码转换器
文件夹结构图
文本去重
文本差异比较
文本统计
文本转Unicode名称
文本转北约音标字母
智能文本替换器与换行器
正则表达式测试器
符文转换器
表情符号选择器
重复行查找器
ETA计算器
TTL计算器
iCalendar生成器
iCal合并器
iCal文件解析器
倒计时
周数转换器
天数计算器
定时/工作日闹钟
持续时间计算器
日期+持续时间计算器
日期时间转换器
时区转换器
时间闹钟
秒表
WiFi二维码生成器
二维码在线扫码解码器
二维码生成器
二维码联系信息生成器
二维码解码器
在线二维码扫描工具
条形码生成器
条形码读取器
中国亲戚关系计算器
地理距离计算器
基准测试构建器
基金投资策略分析工具
年龄计算器
百分比计算器
纵横比计算器
卡牌选择器
幸运轮
抛硬币工具
骰子滚动器
体积单位转换器
力单位转换器
功率转换器
压力单位转换器
温度转换器
照度转换器
能源单位转换器
角度单位转换器
质量单位转换器
长度单位转换器
面积单位转换器
BIP39密码短语生成器
NanoID生成器
OTP代码生成器
PIN码生成器
UUID生成器
UUID转换器
令牌生成器
密码短语生成器
数字缩写生成器
.htaccess生成器
/etc/fstab生成器
BIMI DNS生成器
CURL命令生成器
Crontab生成器
DKIM DNS生成器
DMARC DNS生成器
DNS查询
HAR清理器
Htpasswd/htaccess生成器
IPv4/6 CIDR转IP范围计算器
IPv4/6范围转CIDR计算器
IPv4/IPv6/IP范围/CIDR在IP范围/CIDR/IP掩码中
IPv4地址转换器
IPv4子网计算器
IPv4范围扩展器
IPv6 ULA生成器
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IP地理位置
IP子网排除计算器
MAC地址查询
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Nginx格式化工具
Option43生成器
Punycode转换器
RAID计算器
Rsync命令生成器
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Bash备忘单

Bash常用命令
bash
shell
#!/bin/bash
##############################################################################
# SHORTCUTS and HISTORY
##############################################################################

CTRL+A  # move to beginning of line
CTRL+B  # moves backward one character
CTRL+C  # halts the current command
CTRL+D  # deletes one character backward or logs out of current session, similar to exit
CTRL+E  # moves to end of line
CTRL+F  # moves forward one character
CTRL+G  # aborts the current editing command and ring the terminal bell
CTRL+H  # deletes one character under cursor (same as DELETE)
CTRL+J  # same as RETURN
CTRL+K  # deletes (kill) forward to end of line
CTRL+L  # clears screen and redisplay the line
CTRL+M  # same as RETURN
CTRL+N  # next line in command history
CTRL+O  # same as RETURN, then displays next line in history file
CTRL+P  # previous line in command history
CTRL+Q  # resumes suspended shell output
CTRL+R  # searches backward
CTRL+S  # searches forward or suspends shell output
CTRL+T  # transposes two characters
CTRL+U  # kills backward from point to the beginning of line
CTRL+V  # makes the next character typed verbatim
CTRL+W  # kills the word behind the cursor
CTRL+X  # lists the possible filename completions of the current word
CTRL+Y  # retrieves (yank) last item killed
CTRL+Z  # stops the current command, resume with fg in the foreground or bg in the background

ALT+B   # moves backward one word
ALT+D   # deletes next word
ALT+F   # moves forward one word
ALT+H   # deletes one character backward
ALT+T   # transposes two words
ALT+.   # pastes last word from the last command. Pressing it repeatedly traverses through command history.
ALT+U   # capitalizes every character from the current cursor position to the end of the word
ALT+L   # uncapitalizes every character from the current cursor position to the end of the word
ALT+C   # capitalizes the letter under the cursor. The cursor then moves to the end of the word.
ALT+R   # reverts any changes to a command you’ve pulled from your history if you’ve edited it.
ALT+?   # list possible completions to what is typed
ALT+^   # expand line to most recent match from history

CTRL+X then (   # start recording a keyboard macro
CTRL+X then )   # finish recording keyboard macro
CTRL+X then E   # recall last recorded keyboard macro
CTRL+X then CTRL+E   # invoke text editor (specified by $EDITOR) on current command line then execute resultes as shell commands
CTRL+A then D  # logout from screen but don't kill it, if any command exist, it will continue

BACKSPACE  # deletes one character backward
DELETE     # deletes one character under cursor

history   # shows command line history
!!        # repeats the last command
!<n>      # refers to command line 'n'
!<string> # refers to command starting with 'string'
esc :wq   # exits and saves script

exit      # logs out of current session


##############################################################################
# BASH BASICS
##############################################################################

env                 # displays all environment variables

echo $SHELL         # displays the shell you're using
echo $BASH_VERSION  # displays bash version

bash                # if you want to use bash (type exit to go back to your previously opened shell)
whereis bash        # locates the binary, source and manual-page for a command
which bash          # finds out which program is executed as 'bash' (default: /bin/bash, can change across environments)

clear               # clears content on window (hide displayed lines)


##############################################################################
# FILE COMMANDS
##############################################################################


ls                            # lists your files in current directory, ls <dir> to print files in a specific directory
ls -l                         # lists your files in 'long format', which contains the exact size of the file, who owns the file and who has the right to look at it, and when it was last modified
ls -a                         # lists all files in 'long format', including hidden files (name beginning with '.')
ln -s <filename> <link>       # creates symbolic link to file
readlink <filename>           # shows where a symbolic links points to
tree                          # show directories and subdirectories in easilly readable file tree
mc                            # terminal file explorer (alternative to ncdu)
touch <filename>              # creates or updates (edit) your file
mktemp -t <filename>          # make a temp file in /tmp/ which is deleted at next boot (-d to make directory)
cat <filename>                # displays file raw content (will not be interpreted)
cat -n <filename>             # shows number of lines
nl <file.sh>                  # shows number of lines in file
cat filename1 > filename2     # Copy filename1 to filename2
cat filename1 >> filename2    # merge two files texts together
any_command > <filename>      # '>' is used to perform redirections, it will set any_command's stdout to file instead of "real stdout" (generally /dev/stdout)
more <filename>               # shows the first part of a file (move with space and type q to quit)
head <filename>               # outputs the first lines of file (default: 10 lines)
tail <filename>               # outputs the last lines of file (useful with -f option) (default: 10 lines)
vim <filename>                # opens a file in VIM (VI iMproved) text editor, will create it if it doesn't exist
mv <filename1> <dest>         # moves a file to destination, behavior will change based on 'dest' type (dir: file is placed into dir; file: file will replace dest (tip: useful for renaming))
cp <filename1> <dest>         # copies a file
rm <filename>                 # removes a file
find . -name <name> <type>    # searches for a file or a directory in the current directory and all its sub-directories by its name
diff <filename1> <filename2>  # compares files, and shows where they differ
wc <filename>                 # tells you how many lines, words and characters there are in a file. Use -lwc (lines, word, character) to ouput only 1 of those informations
sort <filename>               # sorts the contents of a text file line by line in alphabetical order, use -n for numeric sort and -r for reversing order.
sort -t -k <filename>         # sorts the contents on specific sort key field starting from 1, using the field separator t.
rev                           # reverse string characters (hello becomes olleh)
chmod -options <filename>     # lets you change the read, write, and execute permissions on your files (more infos: SUID, GUID)
gzip <filename>               # compresses files using gzip algorithm
gunzip <filename>             # uncompresses files compressed by gzip
gzcat <filename>              # lets you look at gzipped file without actually having to gunzip it
lpr <filename>                # prints the file
lpq                           # checks out the printer queue
lprm <jobnumber>              # removes something from the printer queue
genscript                     # converts plain text files into postscript for printing and gives you some options for formatting
dvips <filename>              # prints .dvi files (i.e. files produced by LaTeX)
grep <pattern> <filenames>    # looks for the string in the files
grep -r <pattern> <dir>       # search recursively for pattern in directory
head -n file_name | tail +n   # Print nth line from file.
head -y lines.txt | tail +x   # want to display all the lines from x to y. This includes the xth and yth lines.

sed 's/<pattern>/<replacement>/g' <filename> # replace pattern in file with replacement value to std output the character after s (/) is the delimeter 
sed -i 's/<pattern>/<replacement>/g' <filename> # replace pattern in file with replacement value in place
echo "this" | sed 's/is/at/g' # replace pattern from input stream with replacement value

##############################################################################
# DIRECTORY COMMANDS
##############################################################################


mkdir <dirname>               # makes a new directory
rmdir <dirname>               # remove an empty directory
rmdir -rf <dirname>           # remove a non-empty directory
mv <dir1> <dir2>              # rename a directory from <dir1> to <dir2>
cd                            # changes to home
cd ..                         # changes to the parent directory
cd <dirname>                  # changes directory
cp -r <dir1> <dir2>           # copy <dir1> into <dir2> including sub-directories
pwd                           # tells you where you currently are
cd ~                          # changes to home.
cd -                          # changes to previous working directory

##############################################################################
# SSH, SYSTEM INFO & NETWORK COMMANDS
##############################################################################


ssh user@host            # connects to host as user
ssh -p <port> user@host  # connects to host on specified port as user
ssh-copy-id user@host    # adds your ssh key to host for user to enable a keyed or passwordless login

whoami                   # returns your username
su <user>                # switch to a different user
su -                     # switch to root, likely needs to be sudo su -
sudo <command>           # execute command as the root user
passwd                   # lets you change your password
quota -v                 # shows what your disk quota is
date                     # shows the current date and time
cal                      # shows the month's calendar
uptime                   # shows current uptime
w                        # displays whois online
finger <user>            # displays information about user
uname -a                 # shows kernel information
man <command>            # shows the manual for specified command
info <command>           # shows another documentation system for the specific command
help                     # shows documentation about built-in commands and functions
df                       # shows disk usage
du <filename>            # shows the disk usage of the files and directories in filename (du -s give only a total)
resize2fs                # ext2/ext3/ext4 file system resizer
last <yourUsername>      # lists your last logins
ps -u yourusername       # lists your processes
kill <PID>               # kills the processes with the ID you gave
killall <processname>    # kill all processes with the name
top                      # displays your currently active processes
lsof                     # lists open files
bg                       # lists stopped or background jobs ; resume a stopped job in the background
fg                       # brings the most recent job in the foreground
fg <job>                 # brings job to the foreground

ping <host>              # pings host and outputs results
whois <domain>           # gets whois information for domain
dig <domain>             # gets DNS information for domain
dig -x <host>            # reverses lookup host
wget <file>              # downloads file
netstat                  # Print network connections, routing tables, interface statistics, masquerade connections, and multicast memberships

time <command>           # report time consumed by command execution


##############################################################################
# VARIABLES
##############################################################################


varname=value                # defines a variable
varname=value command        # defines a variable to be in the environment of a particular subprocess
echo $varname                # checks a variable's value
echo $$                      # prints process ID of the current shell
echo $!                      # prints process ID of the most recently invoked background job
echo $?                      # displays the exit status of the last command
read <varname>               # reads a string from the input and assigns it to a variable
read -p "prompt" <varname>   # same as above but outputs a prompt to ask user for value
column -t <filename>         # display info in pretty columns (often used with pipe)
let <varname> = <equation>   # performs mathematical calculation using operators like +, -, *, /, %
export VARNAME=value         # defines an environment variable (will be available in subprocesses)
export -f  <funcname>        # Exports function 'funcname'
export var1="var1 value"     # Export and assign in the same statement
export <varname>             # Copy Bash variable
declare -x <varname>         # Copy Bash variable

array[0]=valA                # how to define an array
array[1]=valB
array[2]=valC
array=([2]=valC [0]=valA [1]=valB)  # another way
array=(valA valB valC)              # and another

${array[i]}                  # displays array's value for this index. If no index is supplied, array element 0 is assumed
${#array[i]}                 # to find out the length of any element in the array
${#array[@]}                 # to find out how many values there are in the array

declare -a                   # the variables are treated as arrays
declare -f                   # uses function names only
declare -F                   # displays function names without definitions
declare -i                   # the variables are treated as integers
declare -r                   # makes the variables read-only
declare -x                   # marks the variables for export via the environment
declare -l                   # uppercase values in the variable are converted to lowercase
declare -A                   # makes it an associative array

${varname:-word}             # if varname exists and isn't null, return its value; otherwise return word
${varname:word}              # if varname exists and isn't null, return its value; otherwise return word
${varname:=word}             # if varname exists and isn't null, return its value; otherwise set it word and then return its value
${varname:?message}          # if varname exists and isn't null, return its value; otherwise print varname, followed by message and abort the current command or script
${varname:+word}             # if varname exists and isn't null, return word; otherwise return null
${varname:offset:length}     # performs substring expansion. It returns the substring of $varname starting at offset and up to length characters

${variable#pattern}          # if the pattern matches the beginning of the variable's value, delete the shortest part that matches and return the rest
${variable##pattern}         # if the pattern matches the beginning of the variable's value, delete the longest part that matches and return the rest
${variable%pattern}          # if the pattern matches the end of the variable's value, delete the shortest part that matches and return the rest
${variable%%pattern}         # if the pattern matches the end of the variable's value, delete the longest part that matches and return the rest
${variable/pattern/string}   # the longest match to pattern in variable is replaced by string. Only the first match is replaced
${variable//pattern/string}  # the longest match to pattern in variable is replaced by string. All matches are replaced

${#varname}                  # returns the length of the value of the variable as a character string

*(patternlist)               # matches zero or more occurrences of the given patterns
+(patternlist)               # matches one or more occurrences of the given patterns
?(patternlist)               # matches zero or one occurrence of the given patterns
@(patternlist)               # matches exactly one of the given patterns
!(patternlist)               # matches anything except one of the given patterns

$(UNIX command)              # command substitution: runs the command and returns standard output

typeset -l <x>                 # makes variable local - <x> must be an interger

##############################################################################
# FUNCTIONS
##############################################################################


# The function refers to passed arguments by position (as if they were positional parameters), that is, $1, $2, and so forth.
# $@ is equal to "$1" "$2"... "$N", where N is the number of positional parameters. $# holds the number of positional parameters.


function functname() {
  shell commands
}

unset -f functname  # deletes a function definition
declare -f          # displays all defined functions in your login session


##############################################################################
# FLOW CONTROLS
##############################################################################


statement1 && statement2  # and operator
statement1 || statement2  # or operator

-a                        # and operator inside a test conditional expression
-o                        # or operator inside a test conditional expression

# STRINGS

str1 == str2               # str1 matches str2
str1 != str2               # str1 does not match str2
str1 < str2                # str1 is less than str2 (alphabetically)
str1 > str2                # str1 is greater than str2 (alphabetically)
str1 \> str2               # str1 is sorted after str2
str1 \< str2               # str1 is sorted before str2
-n str1                    # str1 is not null (has length greater than 0)
-z str1                    # str1 is null (has length 0)

# FILES

-a file                   # file exists or its compilation is successful
-d file                   # file exists and is a directory
-e file                   # file exists; same -a
-f file                   # file exists and is a regular file (i.e., not a directory or other special type of file)
-r file                   # you have read permission
-s file                   # file exists and is not empty
-w file                   # your have write permission
-x file                   # you have execute permission on file, or directory search permission if it is a directory
-N file                   # file was modified since it was last read
-O file                   # you own file
-G file                   # file's group ID matches yours (or one of yours, if you are in multiple groups)
file1 -nt file2           # file1 is newer than file2
file1 -ot file2           # file1 is older than file2

# NUMBERS

-lt                       # less than
-le                       # less than or equal
-eq                       # equal
-ge                       # greater than or equal
-gt                       # greater than
-ne                       # not equal

if condition
then
  statements
[elif condition
  then statements...]
[else
  statements]
fi

for x in {1..10}
do
  statements
done

for name [in list]
do
  statements that can use $name
done

for (( initialisation ; ending condition ; update ))
do
  statements...
done

case expression in
  pattern1 )
    statements ;;
  pattern2 )
    statements ;;
esac

select name [in list]
do
  statements that can use $name
done

while condition; do
  statements
done

until condition; do
  statements
done

##############################################################################
# COMMAND-LINE PROCESSING CYCLE
##############################################################################


# The default order for command lookup is functions, followed by built-ins, with scripts and executables last.
# There are three built-ins that you can use to override this order: `command`, `builtin` and `enable`.

command  # removes alias and function lookup. Only built-ins and commands found in the search path are executed
builtin  # looks up only built-in commands, ignoring functions and commands found in PATH
enable   # enables and disables shell built-ins

eval     # takes arguments and run them through the command-line processing steps all over again


##############################################################################
# INPUT/OUTPUT REDIRECTORS
##############################################################################


cmd1|cmd2  # pipe; takes standard output of cmd1 as standard input to cmd2
< file     # takes standard input from file
> file     # directs standard output to file
>> file    # directs standard output to file; append to file if it already exists
>|file     # forces standard output to file even if noclobber is set
n>|file    # forces output to file from file descriptor n even if noclobber is set
<> file    # uses file as both standard input and standard output
n<>file    # uses file as both input and output for file descriptor n
n>file     # directs file descriptor n to file
n<file     # takes file descriptor n from file
n>>file    # directs file description n to file; append to file if it already exists
n>&        # duplicates standard output to file descriptor n
n<&        # duplicates standard input from file descriptor n
n>&m       # file descriptor n is made to be a copy of the output file descriptor
n<&m       # file descriptor n is made to be a copy of the input file descriptor
&>file     # directs standard output and standard error to file
<&-        # closes the standard input
>&-        # closes the standard output
n>&-       # closes the ouput from file descriptor n
n<&-       # closes the input from file descriptor n

|tee <file># output command to both terminal and a file (-a to append to file)


##############################################################################
# PROCESS HANDLING
##############################################################################


# To suspend a job, type CTRL+Z while it is running. You can also suspend a job with CTRL+Y.
# This is slightly different from CTRL+Z in that the process is only stopped when it attempts to read input from terminal.
# Of course, to interrupt a job, type CTRL+C.

myCommand &  # runs job in the background and prompts back the shell

jobs         # lists all jobs (use with -l to see associated PID)

fg           # brings a background job into the foreground
fg %+        # brings most recently invoked background job
fg %-        # brings second most recently invoked background job
fg %N        # brings job number N
fg %string   # brings job whose command begins with string
fg %?string  # brings job whose command contains string

kill -l               # returns a list of all signals on the system, by name and number
kill PID              # terminates process with specified PID
kill -s SIGKILL 4500  # sends a signal to force or terminate the process
kill -15 913          # Ending PID 913 process with signal 15 (TERM)
kill %1               # Where %1 is the number of job as read from 'jobs' command.

ps           # prints a line of information about the current running login shell and any processes running under it
ps -a        # selects all processes with a tty except session leaders

trap cmd sig1 sig2  # executes a command when a signal is received by the script
trap "" sig1 sig2   # ignores that signals
trap - sig1 sig2    # resets the action taken when the signal is received to the default

disown <PID|JID>    # removes the process from the list of jobs

wait                # waits until all background jobs have finished
sleep <number>      # wait # of seconds before continuing

pv                  # display progress bar for data handling commands. often used with pipe like |pv
yes                 # give yes response everytime an input is requested from script/process


##############################################################################
# TIPS & TRICKS
##############################################################################


# set an alias
cd; nano .bash_profile
> alias gentlenode='ssh admin@gentlenode.com -p 3404'  # add your alias in .bash_profile

# to quickly go to a specific directory
cd; nano .bashrc
> shopt -s cdable_vars
> export websites="/Users/mac/Documents/websites"

source .bashrc
cd $websites


##############################################################################
# DEBUGGING SHELL PROGRAMS
##############################################################################


bash -n scriptname  # don't run commands; check for syntax errors only
set -o noexec       # alternative (set option in script)

bash -v scriptname  # echo commands before running them
set -o verbose      # alternative (set option in script)

bash -x scriptname  # echo commands after command-line processing
set -o xtrace       # alternative (set option in script)

trap 'echo $varname' EXIT  # useful when you want to print out the values of variables at the point that your script exits

function errtrap {
  es=$?
  echo "ERROR line $1: Command exited with status $es."
}

trap 'errtrap $LINENO' ERR  # is run whenever a command in the surrounding script or function exits with non-zero status

function dbgtrap {
  echo "badvar is $badvar"
}

trap dbgtrap DEBUG  # causes the trap code to be executed before every statement in a function or script
# ...section of code in which the problem occurs...
trap - DEBUG  # turn off the DEBUG trap

function returntrap {
  echo "A return occurred"
}

trap returntrap RETURN  # is executed each time a shell function or a script executed with the . or source commands finishes executing

##############################################################################
# COLORS AND BACKGROUNDS
##############################################################################
# note: \e or \x1B also work instead of \033
# Reset
Color_Off='\033[0m' # Text Reset

# Regular Colors
Black='\033[0;30m'  # Black
Red='\033[0;31m'    # Red
Green='\033[0;32m'  # Green
Yellow='\033[0;33m' # Yellow
Blue='\033[0;34m'   # Blue
Purple='\033[0;35m' # Purple
Cyan='\033[0;36m'   # Cyan
White='\033[0;97m'  # White

# Additional colors
LGrey='\033[0;37m'  # Light Gray
DGrey='\033[0;90m'  # Dark Gray
LRed='\033[0;91m'   # Light Red
LGreen='\033[0;92m' # Light Green
LYellow='\033[0;93m'# Light Yellow
LBlue='\033[0;94m'  # Light Blue
LPurple='\033[0;95m'# Light Purple
LCyan='\033[0;96m'  # Light Cyan


# Bold
BBlack='\033[1;30m' # Black
BRed='\033[1;31m'   # Red
BGreen='\033[1;32m' # Green
BYellow='\033[1;33m'# Yellow
BBlue='\033[1;34m'  # Blue
BPurple='\033[1;35m'# Purple
BCyan='\033[1;36m'  # Cyan
BWhite='\033[1;37m' # White

# Underline
UBlack='\033[4;30m' # Black
URed='\033[4;31m'   # Red
UGreen='\033[4;32m' # Green
UYellow='\033[4;33m'# Yellow
UBlue='\033[4;34m'  # Blue
UPurple='\033[4;35m'# Purple
UCyan='\033[4;36m'  # Cyan
UWhite='\033[4;37m' # White

# Background
On_Black='\033[40m' # Black
On_Red='\033[41m'   # Red
On_Green='\033[42m' # Green
On_Yellow='\033[43m'# Yellow
On_Blue='\033[44m'  # Blue
On_Purple='\033[45m'# Purple
On_Cyan='\033[46m'  # Cyan
On_White='\033[47m' # White

# Example of usage
echo -e "${Green}This is GREEN text${Color_Off} and normal text"
echo -e "${Red}${On_White}This is Red test on White background${Color_Off}"
# option -e is mandatory, it enable interpretation of backslash escapes
printf "${Red} This is red \n"

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