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submitted 11 months ago by heygooberman@lemmy.today to c/linux@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.today/post/3418985

I recently got into Arch Linux via EndeavourOS. I'm trying to find a way to remember all the Pacman and Yay commands, but I'm not able to find a good approach to remembering most of the commands.

Does anybody have any mnemonics to help with this? For example, how did you remember that Yay -Yc was the command to remove all unneeded dependencies?

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[-] aBundleOfFerrets@sh.itjust.works 5 points 11 months ago

I just look it up every time, I don’t remove packages often. Also yay can usually figure out pacman flags when you use them with it

[-] Vegoon@feddit.de 4 points 11 months ago

According to the manpage --Yay --clean is the thought behind it, its a Yay specific shortcut for pacman -Rs $(pacman -Qqdt) Remove recursive what the Query quiet (short names) on the database lists as unrequired t

Now -Yc does not sound that bad.

It is still good to learn the verbose commands for pacman/paru/yay from the manpages, once you are familiar with them its easy to build more advanced commands for special use-cases.

[-] Helix@feddit.de 2 points 11 months ago

Use tealdeer, grep the manpage or read --help or use https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Pacman/Rosetta

[-] Solumbran@lemmy.world 1 points 11 months ago

I just use pamac. Almost never have to use pacman directly, except if somehow something broke with pamac, which is rare.

[-] cakeistheanswer@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 11 months ago

Tldr and tealdeer in the arch repo are both helpful, but Ill do you one better since someone already beat me to it. I found fish shell's tab completion with either tool to be immensely helpful if you're not trying to stay stock standard. But if you're working on a lot of remote machines you don't own stick with bash/zsh.

There's some easy to find fuzzy search and linting for for history plugins that mean if you found it once you can do it again in whichever shell.

Its mostly familiarity, but i don't think I could function without fzf.

this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2023
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