How to Use tldr pages on Linux
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The tldr pages project seeks to improve and simplify the well-known man pages. tldr pages provide information on a wide range of Linux commands and include several options to interact with the information. Compared to man pages, each tldr page aims to be more intuitive and readable. When learning new Linux commands, tldr pages are an excellent resource.
In this guide, you learn more about the tldr pages project, how to install tldr pages on a Linux system, and how to use the tldr
command. This guide also provides a comparison between man pages and tldr pages.
Before You Begin
If you have not already done so, create a Linode account and Compute Instance. See our Getting Started with Linode and Creating a Compute Instance guides.
Follow our Setting Up and Securing a Compute Instance guide to update your system. You may also wish to set the timezone, configure your hostname, create a limited user account, and harden SSH access.
NoteThe steps in this guide are written for non-root users. Commands that require elevated privileges are prefixed withsudo
. If you’re not familiar with thesudo
command, see the Linux Users and Groups guide.
What are tldr pages?
The tldr pages project aims to provide a simple alternative to man pages, one that emphasizes readability and practical examples.
As with man pages, you can use tldr pages to find a description of a command and its available options. But, unlike man pages, tldr pages does not try to provide a comprehensive list of options for each command. Instead, it focuses on each command’s most useful options and gives clear and practical examples for each.
The result is a resource that can make it much easier to learn and start using a new command. A command’s man page can be useful if you know the command and want to work out specific actions. However, it can be difficult to engage with man pages if you are less familiar with the command. A command’s tldr page, on the other hand, focuses on introducing you to a command. It gives you everything you need to know short of advanced usage.
How to Install tldr
To interact with tldr pages, you can use one of the tldr clients. These give you access to tldr pages from the command line or, in some cases, other platforms.
Several tldr clients are available, and you can see the full listing on the tldr GitHub page.
This guide gives you installation steps for two of the most popular tldr clients, one using Node.js and the other using Python 3. Take a look at each of the tldr clients in the sections below to learn how to install them on your Linux system.
Using Node.js
Install the node package manager (NPM). The recommended way to do this is by first installing the Node Version Manager (NVM).
You can use the series of commands shown below to first install NVM and then use it to install the current version of Node.js. The Node.js installation includes the current NPM release.
Before proceeding, check the NVM releases page, and replace
v0.38.0
from the command below with the version number of the latest release you find on the releases page.curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.38.0/install.sh | bash source ~/.bashrc nvm install node
You can then verify your NPM installation using the following command:
npm --version
7.21.0
Install
tldr
via NPM. Use the-g
option to installtldr
as a global NPM package.npm install tldr -g
Using Python 3
Make sure you have Python 3 installed.
On Debian and Ubuntu, recent releases include Python 3 by default, which you can verify using the
--version
flag.python3 --version
Python 3.8.10
On AlmaLinux, CentOS (8 or later), and Fedora, use the command below to install Python 3.
sudo dnf install python3
Install tldr via Pip 3, the default package installer for Python 3.
sudo pip3 install tldr
How to Use tldr
You can start using tldr pages by issuing the tldr
command followed by the name of a command you want to know more about. For example, you can get the tldr page for the ls
command as shown below:
tldr ls
ls
List directory contents.
More information: https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/ls.
- List files one per line:
ls -1
- List all files, including hidden files:
ls -a
- List all files, with trailing `/` added to directory names:
ls -F
- Long format list (permissions, ownership, size, and modification date) of all files:
ls -la
- Long format list with size displayed using human-readable units (KiB, MiB, GiB):
ls -lh
- Long format list sorted by size (descending):
ls -lS
- Long format list of all files, sorted by modification date (oldest first):
ls -ltr
- Only list directories:
ls -d */
By way of contrast, here is an excerpt from the extensive man page for the ls
command.
man ls
LS(1) User Commands LS(1)
NAME
ls - list directory contents
SYNOPSIS
ls [OPTION]... [FILE]...
DESCRIPTION
List information about the FILEs (the current directory by default). Sort entries alphabetically if none of -cftuvSUX nor --sort is specified.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
-a, --all
do not ignore entries starting with .
-A, --almost-all
do not list implied . and ..
--author
with -l, print the author of each file
-b, --escape
print C-style escapes for nongraphic characters
--block-size=SIZE
with -l, scale sizes by SIZE when printing them; e.g., '--block-size=M'; see SIZE format below
-B, --ignore-backups
do not list implied entries ending with ~
[...]
As you can see, the tldr page focuses on giving you clear descriptions and examples of some of the most relevant options for the command. The man page, on the other hand, focuses on a comprehensive listing of options. For this reason, man pages' option descriptions are not always clear and can fall short in helping you find the most useful options.
Below is another example that goes further in illustrating the contrast between tldr pages and man pages.
tldr vim
vim
Vim (Vi IMproved), a command-line text editor, provides several modes for different kinds of text manipulation.
Pressing `i` enters insert mode. `Esc` enters normal mode, which enables the use of Vim commands.
More information: https://www.vim.org.
- Open a file:
vim path/to/file
- Open a file at a specified line number:
vim +line_number path/to/file
- View Vim's help manual:
:help<Enter>
- Save and Quit:
:wq<Enter>
- Undo the last operation:
u
- Search for a pattern in the file (press `n`/`N` to go to next/previous match):
/search_pattern<Enter>
- Perform a regular expression substitution in the whole file:
:%s/regular_expression/replacement/g<Enter>
- Display the line numbers:
:set nu<Enter>
And again, the output below displays an excerpt from the man page for comparison.
man vim
VIM(1) General Commands Manual VIM(1)
NAME
vim - Vi IMproved, a programmer's text editor
SYNOPSIS
vim [options] [file ..]
vim [options] -
vim [options] -t tag
vim [options] -q [errorfile]
ex gex
view
gvim gview vimx evim eview
rvim rview rgvim rgview
DESCRIPTION
Vim is a text editor that is upwards compatible to Vi. It can be used to edit all kinds of plain text. It is especially useful for editing programs.
There are a lot of enhancements above Vi: multi level undo, multi windows and buffers, syntax highlighting, command line editing, filename completion, on-line help,
visual selection, etc.. See ":help vi_diff.txt" for a summary of the differences between Vim and Vi.
While running Vim a lot of help can be obtained from the on-line help system, with the ":help" command. See the ON-LINE HELP section below.
Most often Vim is started to edit a single file with the command
vim file
More generally Vim is started with:
vim [options] [filelist]
If the filelist is missing, the editor will start with an empty buffer. Otherwise exactly one out of the following four may be used to choose one or more files to be
edited.
file .. A list of filenames. The first one will be the current file and read into the buffer. The cursor will be positioned on the first line of the buffer. You
can get to the other files with the ":next" command. To edit a file that starts with a dash, precede the filelist with "--".
- The file to edit is read from stdin. Commands are read from stderr, which should be a TTY.
-t {tag} The file to edit and the initial cursor position depends on a "tag", a sort of goto label. {tag} is looked up in the tags file, the associated file becomes
the current file and the associated command is executed. Mostly this is used for C programs, in which case {tag} could be a function name. The effect is
that the file containing that function becomes the current file and the cursor is positioned on the start of the function. See ":help tag-commands".
-q [errorfile]
Start in quickFix mode. The file [errorfile] is read and the first error is displayed. If [errorfile] is omitted, the filename is obtained from the
'errorfile' option (defaults to "AztecC.Err" for the Amiga, "errors.err" on other systems). Further errors can be jumped to with the ":cn" command. See
":help quickfix".
[...]
Notice that, with the tldr page, there is little reference to command-line arguments. This is because Vim does not frequently use them. Instead, the tldr page focuses on the commands you may want to use within Vim. This is much more helpful when getting started using a tool like Vim.
By contrast, the man page does not provide any information about commands you can use once you have Vim up and running. Instead, true to its goal, the man page gives you an exhaustive list of command-line options. It even includes the seldom-used alternative command names for starting Vim in different modes.
How to Use tldr pages and man Pages Together
tldr pages work best when used in conjunction with man pages. With a command’s tldr page, you get a clear and succinct introduction to the command. Its examples and focus on useful options makes the tldr page a valuable place to start.
The format used by tldr pages does leave some information out for many commands. For instance, say you see the following ls
command:
ls -Alh
The tldr page informs you that the -l
and -h
options give you a long listing format and human-readable file sizes, respectively. But then, what does the -A
option do? That is where the man page can be useful.
Typically, this is a good method to keep in mind when using tldr pages. A command’s tldr page frequently contains all you need to get started; sometimes, you need nothing more than what the tldr page offers. If you find yourself needing to dig deeper into a command, build off of what you learn on the tldr page with the wealth of details you can find on the man page.
Conclusion
You now have the knowledge you need to get started using tldr pages. It might be helpful to go ahead and start checking out the tldr pages for some commands you are already using. That way, you get to know tldr pages better and potentially learn how to get more out of those commands.
Do you see something missing while looking over a tldr page? Is there a command you notice does not have a tldr page yet? Or, do you just like what tldr pages is doing and want to be a part of it? The tldr pages project maintainers keep an open invitation for contributors. All of the tldr pages are stored on the project’s GitHub repository, and the tldr team provides a guide for contributing.
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