Es soll ja ein Beispiel zu tldr
in den Artikel, ich bin für tldr tar
kater@mini:~$ tldr tar tar Archiving utility.Often combined with a compression method, such as gzip or bzip2.More information: https://www.gnu.org/software/tar. - [c]reate an archive and write it to a [f]ile: tar cf {{target.tar}} {{file1}} {{file2}} {{file3}} - [c]reate a g[z]ipped archive and write it to a [f]ile: tar czf {{target.tar.gz}} {{file1}} {{file2}} {{file3}} - [c]reate a g[z]ipped archive from a directory using relative paths: tar czf {{target.tar.gz}} --directory={{path/to/directory}} . - E[x]tract a (compressed) archive [f]ile into the current directory [v]erbosely: tar xvf {{source.tar[.gz|.bz2|.xz]}} - E[x]tract a (compressed) archive [f]ile into the target directory: tar xf {{source.tar[.gz|.bz2|.xz]}} --directory={{path/to/directory}} - [c]reate a compressed archive and write it to a [f]ile, using [a]rchive suffix to determine the compression program: tar caf {{target.tar.xz}} {{file1}} {{file2}} {{file3}} - Lis[t] the contents of a tar [f]ile [v]erbosely: tar tvf {{source.tar}} - E[x]tract files matching a pattern from an archive [f]ile: tar xf {{source.tar}} --wildcards "{{*.html}}" kater@mini:~$
Es werden aber die Farben der Terminal Ausgabe nicht dargestellt wodurch die Ausgabe unübersichtlich wirkt.
Soll ich ein Photo der Terminal Ausgabe einbinden? Was meint ihr?