-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Stuart Ellis wrote: > On Fri, 2006-04-28 at 15:50 -0500, James McElhannon wrote: >> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >> Hash: SHA1 >> >> Hi All, >> >> I wanted to propose the following TOC for the Command Prompt Survival >> Guide, one of the current Doc Ideas... >> >> I would plan on submitting this document to the LDP, too. Their >> equivalent doc is aging and is lite on details. >> >> Please let me know your feedback. >> >> - --- >> >> There are 5 chapters shown below, with the sections numbered. The >> Concepts chapter sets forth just enough theory to be able to use the >> commands below. >> >> The Scenario chapter would put forth some common scenarios that people >> would be faced with. The text would describe the usage of a set of >> commands to perform a task, cross referenced to the Commonly Used >> Commands section. >> >> The Commonly Used Commands would not be a reproduction of the man pages, >> but would instead focus on the common usage of the command. >> >> The Tools would section would be brief scripts to make some things >> easier. I would expect that the details of this section would arise >> during the writing of the rest of the text. Any redundant operations >> shown during the Scenarios would be candidates. >> >> Introduction >> 1. General introduction >> >> Concepts: >> 1. Shells >> 2. Executables and Processes >> 3. stdout, stderr, stdin >> 4. Scripts >> 5. Permissions >> 6. Redirection and Pipes >> 7. Bash prompt customization >> >> Scenarios >> 1. Handling zip/gz files >> 2. Handling tar files >> ... ... >> >> Commonly Used Commands: >> 1. basename >> 2. bash >> 3. bunzip >> 4. bzip >> 5. cd >> 6. chgrp >> 7. chmod >> 8. chown >> 9. clear >> 10. cp >> 11. cut >> 12. echo >> 13. expr >> 14. find >> 15. finger >> 16. grep >> 17. gunzip >> 18. gzip >> 19. head >> 20. hostname >> 21. info >> 22. kill >> 23. ln >> 24. ls >> 25. man >> 26. mkdir >> 27. more >> 28. mv >> 29. ping >> 30. popd >> 31. ps >> 32. pushd >> 33. rm >> 34. rmdir >> 35. rpm >> 36. set >> 37. stty >> 38. su >> 39. sudo >> 40. tail >> 41. tar >> 42. test [] >> 43. traceroute >> 44. uname >> 45. wait >> 46. wc >> 47. where >> 48. who am i >> 49. whoami >> >> Tools >> 1. echodo >> ... ... > > This is a very general suggestion - it may be helpful to phrase the > "Concepts" headings in terms of tasks, since a new user may not strongly > associate the technical features with what they actually do. Some > features also relate to more one technology, e.g. a new user who has > just read about permissions may be puzzled by "permission denied" > messages unless there is at least a mention of SELinux. > > This example is just off the top of my head: > > Concepts: > 1. Understanding the Command-line Environment > 2. Running Commands > 3. How Logging Works > 4. Automating Commands as Scripts > 5. Understanding Linux Security > 6. Connecting Commands Together > 7. Discovering Commands > 8. Customizing Your Command-line Environment > > Section 7 doesn't appear in your ToC - the idea is that if you explain > how to discover useful commands, you could focus on only describing a > small set of commands yourself, with a clean conscience, rather than > feeling obliged to select and cover many. Teach 'em how to fish :). > > The GNOME desktop help browser in FC5 displays man and info > documentation, so the documentation for the hundreds of commands on the > system is accessible, but a new user may need pointers to how to locate > what they need. The apropos command also enables users to find the right > utility, once they are aware of it. > > Unless someone objects, I'm going to take Stuart's comments above and run with it. That was the only feedback on the proposed TOC, and these suggestions sound good to me. Thanks James - -- James McElhannon jlm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx MagnifiSys, LLC www.magnifisys.com -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (MingW32) iD8DBQFEYjg49KWEMihy1VsRAkqIAJ9tSXPSMkNhYRWo0Z27hCsD3rWCFwCeLe4R R5t9HEhqjz93xzC6a9RhSTw= =vfTE -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- fedora-docs-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-docs-list