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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004, D.E. Chadbourne wrote: > hi. wow, i've been trying to follow the thread about shell scripts, but > damn you folks are getting over my head. i know some basics from just > reading a man and screwing around. does anybody know of a good read > (preferably free online) that can help me learn more? thanks. eric. My favorite book for this is O'Reilly's _Unix Power Tools_. It hits a weird balance between being superficial (it gives a chapter to each of dozens of different topics, each of which could be & often has been given a full book length discussion elsewhere), arcane (it gives lots of non-obvious hints), and ultimately practical (best practices, clever shortcuts, etc). Other books might be better for details of particular areas, while still other books might do a better job of giving a broad overview & theory[1], but _UPT_ strikes a good balance. It's an expensive book -- I think the current edition might be $60 or $70, which is why I'm still using the previous edition for now, even though the new one has good material that my version doesn't -- but if all you want to do is get proficient with a broad range of Unix tools (as opposed to drowning in minutae, like a lot of other O'Reilly books will encourage :), then _UPT_ can replace much of the typical Unix bookshelf. I am, to over-emphasize the point, a fan of the book. -- Chris Devers [1] _Unix Administration Handbook_ and _Linux Administration Handbook_, both by Nemeth, Snyder, & Hein, both do an excellent job with the "broad overview & theory" angle on Unix/Linux. But for pragmatic, day-to-day stuff, I think _UPT_ is more fun & useful to read :)
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