diff options
author | Tom Ryder <tom@sanctum.geek.nz> | 2016-07-30 16:48:09 +1200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Tom Ryder <tom@sanctum.geek.nz> | 2016-07-30 16:48:09 +1200 |
commit | 3b53c208f56350e77bc0d37abec8b64564b58ab3 (patch) | |
tree | 53f2e641c7b7f5826b45a866e2d5d58572e24a9c /README.markdown | |
parent | Tidy up discussions of scripts/funcs/completions (diff) | |
download | dotfiles-3b53c208f56350e77bc0d37abec8b64564b58ab3.tar.gz dotfiles-3b53c208f56350e77bc0d37abec8b64564b58ab3.zip |
Be consistent about full-sentence, full-stop
Diffstat (limited to 'README.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | README.markdown | 44 |
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/README.markdown b/README.markdown index cd254cbf..7deddcce 100644 --- a/README.markdown +++ b/README.markdown @@ -184,19 +184,19 @@ I also add completions for my own scripts and functions where useful. There are a few other little tricks in `bash/bashrc.d`, including: -* `apf` prepends arguments to a command with ones read from a file -* `bd` changes into a named ancestor of the current directory -* `fnl` runs a command and save its output and error into temporary files -* `hgrep` searches `$HISTFILE` -* `keep` stores ad-hoc shell functions and variables -* `mkcd` creates a directory and changes into it -* `path` manages the contents of `PATH` conveniently -* `pd` changes to the argument's parent directory -* `readv` prints names and values from `read` calls to `stderr` -* `readz` is an alias for `read -d '' -r` -* `scr` creates a temporary directory and changes into it -* `sd` changes into a sibling of the current directory -* `ud` changes into an indexed ancestor of a directory +* `apf` prepends arguments to a command with ones read from a file. +* `bd` changes into a named ancestor of the current directory. +* `fnl` runs a command and save its output and error into temporary files. +* `hgrep` searches `$HISTFILE`. +* `keep` stores ad-hoc shell functions and variables. +* `mkcd` creates a directory and changes into it. +* `path` manages the contents of `PATH` conveniently. +* `pd` changes to the argument's parent directory. +* `readv` prints names and values from `read` calls to `stderr`. +* `readz` is an alias for `read -d '' -r`. +* `scr` creates a temporary directory and changes into it. +* `sd` changes into a sibling of the current directory. +* `ud` changes into an indexed ancestor of a directory. I also wrap a few command calls with functions to stop me from doing silly things that the commands themselves don't catch. My favourite is the one that @@ -291,20 +291,20 @@ Installed by the `install-bin` target: the hostname if the command returns zero. * Three URL-related shorcut scripts: * `hurl(1)` extracts values of `href` attributes of `<a>` tags, sorts - them uniquely, and writes them to `stdout`; requires - [pup](https://github.com/ericchiang/pup) + them uniquely, and writes them to `stdout`; it requires + [pup](https://github.com/ericchiang/pup). * `murl(1)` converts Markdown documents to HTML with `pandoc(1)` and - runs the output through `hurl(1)` + runs the output through `hurl(1)`. * `urlc(1)` accepts a list of URLs on `stdin` and writes error messages to `stderr` if any of the URLs are broken, redirecting, or are insecure - and have working secure versions; requires `curl(1)` + and have working secure versions; requires `curl(1)`. * Three RFC-related shortcut scripts: - * `rfcf(1)` fetches ASCII RFCs from the IETF website - * `rfct(1)` formats ASCII RFCs + * `rfcf(1)` fetches ASCII RFCs from the IETF website. + * `rfct(1)` formats ASCII RFCs. * `rfcr(1)` does both, displaying in a pager if appropriate, like a - `man(1)` reader for RFCs -* `ax(1)` evaluates an awk expression given on the command line; intended as - a quick way to test how Awk would interpret a given expression. + `man(1)` reader for RFCs. +* `ax(1)` evaluates an awk expression given on the command line; this is + intended as a quick way to test how Awk would interpret a given expression. * `ca(1)` prints a count of its given arguments. * `cf(1)` prints a count of entries in a given directory. * `dub(1)` lists the biggest entries in a directory. |