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How to find all the available tools in mac terminal?
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I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
To see if a tool is available I use options like
ruby --version.
Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command. What is the command/options for it?
macos terminal iterm
add a comment |
I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
To see if a tool is available I use options like
ruby --version.
Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command. What is the command/options for it?
macos terminal iterm
2
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.
– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:type <command>
– Allan
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago
add a comment |
I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
To see if a tool is available I use options like
ruby --version.
Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command. What is the command/options for it?
macos terminal iterm
I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
To see if a tool is available I use options like
ruby --version.
Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command. What is the command/options for it?
macos terminal iterm
macos terminal iterm
asked 3 hours ago
Spear A1Spear A1
162
162
2
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.
– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:type <command>
– Allan
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago
add a comment |
2
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.
– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:type <command>
– Allan
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago
2
2
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:
type <command>– Allan
2 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:
type <command>– Allan
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.
add a comment |
See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
List all commands that a shell knows
.
My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.
$ compgen -c
Example
$ compgen -c | tail
deepcopy-gen
kube-controller-manager
informer-gen
lister-gen
etcd
gen-apidocs
kube-apiserver
kubectl
kubebuilder
conversion-gen
Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:
$ type -a ansible
ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible
This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.
References
- 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins
add a comment |
You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.
ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH")
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.
add a comment |
The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.
add a comment |
The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.
The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.
answered 3 hours ago
jksoegaardjksoegaard
20.7k12150
20.7k12150
add a comment |
add a comment |
See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
List all commands that a shell knows
.
My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.
$ compgen -c
Example
$ compgen -c | tail
deepcopy-gen
kube-controller-manager
informer-gen
lister-gen
etcd
gen-apidocs
kube-apiserver
kubectl
kubebuilder
conversion-gen
Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:
$ type -a ansible
ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible
This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.
References
- 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins
add a comment |
See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
List all commands that a shell knows
.
My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.
$ compgen -c
Example
$ compgen -c | tail
deepcopy-gen
kube-controller-manager
informer-gen
lister-gen
etcd
gen-apidocs
kube-apiserver
kubectl
kubebuilder
conversion-gen
Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:
$ type -a ansible
ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible
This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.
References
- 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins
add a comment |
See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
List all commands that a shell knows
.
My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.
$ compgen -c
Example
$ compgen -c | tail
deepcopy-gen
kube-controller-manager
informer-gen
lister-gen
etcd
gen-apidocs
kube-apiserver
kubectl
kubebuilder
conversion-gen
Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:
$ type -a ansible
ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible
This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.
References
- 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins
See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
List all commands that a shell knows
.
My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.
$ compgen -c
Example
$ compgen -c | tail
deepcopy-gen
kube-controller-manager
informer-gen
lister-gen
etcd
gen-apidocs
kube-apiserver
kubectl
kubebuilder
conversion-gen
Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:
$ type -a ansible
ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible
This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.
References
- 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins
edited 1 hour ago
answered 2 hours ago
slmslm
794514
794514
add a comment |
add a comment |
You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.
ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH")
add a comment |
You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.
ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH")
add a comment |
You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.
ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH")
You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.
ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH")
answered 2 hours ago
fd0fd0
6,43511431
6,43511431
add a comment |
add a comment |
2
ls /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin. Not sure this is what you are looking for though.– nohillside♦
3 hours ago
@nohillside This was also helpful.Thanks.
– Spear A1
3 hours ago
Wouldn't it be easier to just check to see if a command exists rather than go through all the commands in the shell? Eg:
type <command>– Allan
2 hours ago
Don't limit your universe to what has already been installed by apple. You can download more via the brew command. osxdaily.com/2018/03/07/how-install-homebrew-mac-os
– historystamp
2 hours ago