I don't know how many of you receive this weekly newsletter from Linux Journal. They have a section called The Brain Trust which had a tip that I never heard of for searching the history in a Bash shell. Here is the excerpt from the newsletter: THE BRAIN TRUST: READERS SHARE THEIR EXPERTISE This week we have a contribution from Jim C.: "In the technical tips section of your newsletter on 9/5/06, you referred to Bret's alias for searching bash history. Why create an alias when bash gives the user the 'reverse-i-search' and 'forward-i-search' features? At the command line, press Ctrl-R and see this appear on the screen: (reverse-i-search)`': "Then press the characters of the search pattern desired, and bash will display the nearest line from the current history position matching the pattern. Press Ctrl-R again to search the next nearest line; press Ctrl-S to search forward. Press enter to accept and immediately execute the line displayed. Press a left or right cursor key to accept and edit the line. Press Ctrl-C to abandon the search. "Much simpler than searching through a possibly long list from a grep search." Do you have a useful technical tip to share with our community of readers? Send your tips to jgray@ssc.com. We'll send you a free t-shirt for your efforts! Thanks! --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss