On 01/05/2012 01:53 PM, Matthew Saltzman wrote:
On Thu, 2012-01-05 at 11:02 -0500, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
On 01/05/2012 10:16 AM, Alan Evans wrote:
On Thu, Jan 5, 2012 at 12:34 AM, Olav Vitters wrote:
And what, pray tell, does 'r' do?
restart gnome-shell (keeps existing applications; state is not perfectly
preserved). Quicker than rebooting the entire machine just to see the
changes you made to gnome-shell.
A *one* *letter* command to restart the shell?!? That seems like a
horrible mis-feature, like something I might key in accidentally.
Did developers really think that restarting GNOME-shell would be so
common that it justified a single char shortcut?
Truly frightening. BOth ways.
On F15:
$ r
bash: r: command not found...
Similar command is: 'R'
$ which r
/usr/bin/which: no r in
(/usr/lib64/qt-3.3/bin:/usr/lib64/ccache:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/opt/bin:/home/mjs/bin)
$ whereis r
r:
It does seem rather unlikely.
I did it and it worked. 'r' restarted gnome 3 and 'fixed' a couple
issues. Maybe it only works within the <ALt-F2> command environment and
not from a terminal shell?
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