On 06/29/2015 01:15 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 06/29/2015 12:06 PM, jd1008 wrote:
Because ls is aliased in my profile, which is what I use most of the
time :)
I kind of thought that. By default, Fedora aliases ls (and grep) to
use color, which I don't like. I'd not mind it if there were a HUMAN
READABLE chart telling me what color means what, but there isn't. At
first, I got rid of it by tracking down where the alias was created,
but every update to bash trashed it. Now, I've fixed it permanently
by putting these two lines down near the bottom of .bashrc:
alias ls=ls
alias grep=grep
This undoes any unhelpful changes done by whoever it is that thinks
that everybody wants things done the way they do.
Well, The colors are definitely a problem, especially when the terminal
has white
background and one of the colors is so faint it is impossible to discern
the character :)
At this age, I do not need that aggravation.
I alias ls to this:
ls='/bin/ls -CF'
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