On Sat, Sep 28, 2024 at 8:49 PM Aron Insinga <aki(a)insinga.com> wrote:
For the counter-example, I wonder if anyone ever tried
to type very much
(verbose) DCL on VAX/VMS using a Teletype. :-)
I had occasion to use an ASR model 33 Teletype with VAX/VMS. Hated it.
The
DECwriter LA36 was acceptable, though.
While DCL commands generally involved complete words, they could be
abbreviated to the smallest unique abbreviation. Thus one mostly typed DIR
instead of DIRECTORY. Command keywords also were be required to be unique
in the first 4 characters--the DCL parser ignored all but the first four.
characters. The engineers at DEC's Marlboro MA facility named one of their
networked machines TWINKIE so that to log into it they could type SET
HOSTESS TWINKIE.
The terse Unix command verb style can be a steep learning curve for
beginners. How is one supposed to know that you say 'ls' to get a
directory listing? And unfortunately man pages aren't very useful for
beginners because you have to know what the command verb is in order to
call up its man page. Unix lacks a place to ask questions such as "how do
I get a directory listing?".
-Paul W.
-Paul W.
On 9/15/24 16:43, sjenkin(a)canb.auug.org.au wrote:
...
For non touch typists, shorter commands & keywords are helpful.